Bitcoin (BTC) whale buying and selling in 2023 is mostly from speculative investors, new data reveals.
In the latest edition of its weekly newsletter, “The Week On-Chain,” analytics firm Glassnode showed that contrary to popular belief, opportunistic entities are the most active whales.
Since BTC price action returned to $30,000, a shift has taken place among Bitcoin traders.
As Glassnode shows, so-called short-term holders (STHs) — investors holding coins for a maximum of 155 days — have become significantly more common.
As it turns out, the largest-volume investor cohorts, the whales, are also composed of large numbers of STHs.
“Short-Term Holder Dominance across Exchange Inflows has exploded to 82%, which is now drastically above the long-term range over the last five years (typically 55% to 65%),” it stated.
Interest in trading short-timeframe moves on BTC/USD was already in evidence before May. Since the FTX meltdown in late 2022, speculators have been increasingly eager to tap volatility both up and down.
The results have been mixed — realized profits and losses have routinely spiked in line with volatile price moves.
“If we look at the degree of Profit/Loss realized by Short-Term Holder volume flowing into exchanges, it becomes evident that these newer investors are trading local market conditions,” Glassnode continued.
Closer to the present, whales have ramped up exchange activity, in July at one point accounting for 41% of total inflows.
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“Analysis of the Whale Netflow to Exchanges can be used as a proxy for their influence on the supply and demand balance,” “The Week On-Chain” commented on the topic.
As Cointelegraph reported,
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