1. When selling "whales": Exchanges, Funds, and wealthy organizations quietly do so to avoid price drops:
If whales publicly sell a large amount of BTC, the market will panic → prices drop quickly → they will end up selling at a lower price.
Typically, they sell in small orders, spread over multiple days or use OTC (over-the-counter) trading to avoid directly impacting the market price.
Some even “disguise” by alternating between buying small amounts to avoid detection.
2. When buying — publicly to drive FOMO psychology:
If whales reveal they are accumulating (for example, on-chain wallets receiving BTC, ambiguous tweets…), the community and smaller traders will rush to buy out of fear of missing the opportunity → prices rise quickly.
This allows them to realize paper profits immediately after buying thanks to FOMO buying pressure.
Additionally, public buying creates a narrative (“Bitcoin is about to surge”, “whales are back”) → attracting new capital inflow)
3. In summary:
Sell: quietly → keep prices high for as long as possible.
Buy: publicly → create FOMO for quick price increases. #BTC
Mục đích cuối cùng của bất kì: cá nhân, tổ chức, quỹ, chính quyền... cũng cần phải bán Bitcoin để kiếm lời. Nếu không bán thì người khác sẽ bán thay bạn.
Binance News
--
Bitcoin Miners Sell Over 2,000 BTC in Recent Days
According to BlockBeats On-chain Detection, data from CryptoQuant reveals that Bitcoin miners have sold more than 2,000 BTC over the past three days. This significant sell-off highlights ongoing market dynamics and the potential impact on Bitcoin's price stability.
Bitcoin Spot ETF in the U.S. Sees Significant Outflow
According to BlockBeats, monitoring data from Farside indicates that U.S. Bitcoin spot ETFs experienced a cumulative net outflow of $642.9 million this week.