115,000 BTC Sold by Bitcoin Whales — Biggest Sell-Off Since 2022 and Its Impact on Prices
In August 2025, Bitcoin whales made a move that sent shockwaves through the crypto community: they offloaded more than 115,000 BTC, worth nearly $12.7 billion. This is the biggest whale sell-off since mid-2022 — and it happened just as Bitcoin was testing new all-time highs.
If you’re wondering what this means for prices, ETFs, and whether smaller investors should worry, let’s break it down.
What Exactly Happened?
According to on-chain data from Glassnode, large holders — often called whales — reduced their balances by almost 115,000 BTC in a single month.
For context:
- This is the largest monthly outflow since June 2022, during the Terra collapse.
- Smaller wallets (retail investors) were still accumulating during the same time.
- The divergence suggests whales were aggressively taking profits, while retail was still chasing upside.
How Did Prices React?
The sell-off pushed Bitcoin below $108,000, erasing recent gains and triggering liquidations on leveraged trades.
- Prices slipped quickly, showing how whale activity can overwhelm normal market demand.
- Exchange volumes spiked as panic sellers rushed to exit.
- Short-term volatility intensified, although small rebounds were seen intraday.
For everyday investors, the main takeaway is that whale activity still dictates short-term market swings, no matter how strong Bitcoin’s long-term story looks.
Why Did Whales Sell?
There are three main reasons analysts are pointing to:
- Profit-taking at ATHs → Bitcoin had recently touched fresh highs, and whales often move early to lock in gains.
- Regulatory uncertainty → U.S. policy around crypto and ETFs remains unclear, making big holders cautious.
- Risk-off rotation → Some whales moved into cash, stablecoins, or even gold, signaling a shift toward safer assets.
Can Institutional Demand Balance Whale Selling?
Interestingly, while whales were selling, institutional investors were buying:
- U.S.-listed Bitcoin ETFs saw steady inflows throughout August.
- Custody platforms reported growing demand from family offices and funds.
- This creates a tug-of-war: whales selling fast vs. institutions buying slowly.
In the short run, selling pressure usually wins. But over the long run, ETF demand could provide a cushion, preventing deeper crashes.
Market Outlook — What to Watch
So, where do we go from here?
- Key support zones: $105K–$107K.
- Resistance: $112K+.
- Traders should track whale wallet movements and ETF inflows for early signals.
For investors, the lesson is clear:
- Don’t chase short-term pumps — whales often sell into strength.
- Watch for accumulation signals when panic selling settles.
Read More: Bitcoin Whales Dump 115,000 BTC in Largest Sell-Off Since 2022
Key Takeaways
- Largest whale sell-off since 2022 → 115K BTC offloaded.
- Price dropped under $108K with heavy liquidations.
- Whales took profits; institutions kept buying.
- Short-term: volatile. Long-term: Bitcoin’s fundamentals intact.
115,000 BTC Sold by Bitcoin Whales — Biggest Sell-Off Since 2022 and Its Impact on Prices was originally published in Coinmonks on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.