Recent on-chain data shows that large Ethereum holders are currently sitting in unrealized losses, with the magnitude of those losses resembling levels seen near previous market bottoms.
Historically, similar stress levels among whale cohorts have coincided with structural inflection points rather than late-cycle distribution.
What makes this phase notable is that whales have not materially reduced exposure during the cycle. Instead, holdings among the largest addresses have continued to expand, even as price volatility persisted.
Unlike prior cycles where whales were able to distribute into strength, this cycle has not provided a prolonged opportunity for large-scale profit-taking. The absence of meaningful distribution suggests that long-term positioning remains intact.
Whale wallets currently hold some of the largest aggregate balances on record. Despite elevated holdings, there has been no visible rotation out of core positions. This behavior reflects strategic accumulation rather than tactical trading.
When large holders maintain or increase exposure during drawdowns, it typically signals a forward-looking thesis rather than reactive positioning. The current loss profile resembles past periods where accumulation preceded broader market recoveries.
That does not guarantee an immediate rally. However, the structural takeaway is clear: whales are not exiting. They are absorbing supply.
If price stabilizes and broader market liquidity improves, the existing concentration of large holdings could amplify upside momentum during the next expansion phase.
The post Ethereum Whale Losses Mirror Prior Market Bottoms appeared first on ETHNews.

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