Bitcoin Whale Transfers 2,931 BTC After Seven-Year Pause, Stirring Onchain Watchers

A dormant Bitcoin whale moved 2,931 BTC after seven years as exchange whale flows and ETF demand send mixed market signals.
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TL;DR:

  • A dormant Bitcoin whale moved 2,931 BTC worth about $188 million on Sunday after seven years without onchain activity.
  • The wallet was last active when Bitcoin traded near $6,500, meaning the holdings reflected a nearly 10-fold paper gain at around $64,000.
  • CryptoQuant’s exchange whale ratio stood at 0.99, while US spot Bitcoin ETFs recorded $197 million in weekly inflows after $4.51 billion in June outflows during their worst month recorded.

A long-dormant Bitcoin whale has moved 2,931 BTC after seven years of silence, stirring onchain watchers at a fragile moment for market sentiment. The wallet, known as “356my,” transferred roughly $188 million worth of Bitcoin to address “bc1qn” on Sunday, according to Arkham data. The wallet was last active when Bitcoin traded near $6,500. With BTC now around $64,000, the transfer crystallizes a nearly 10-fold paper gain, making the timing difficult to ignore.

The movement does not automatically mean a sale, but it lands inside a broader pattern that traders are already monitoring. Large whale transfers to exchanges often precede selling, and whale transactions are defined in the report as transfers worth at least $10 million. In this case, the destination reported was another wallet, not necessarily an exchange deposit. Still, the signal matters because dormant supply has psychological weight, especially when old coins begin moving after years of unrealized profit and investors wonder whether more long-term holders may follow.

A dormant Bitcoin whale moved 2,931 BTC

Whale flows raise pressure as ETF demand stays mixed

The larger concern comes from exchange-flow concentration. Since the start of the year, whales have driven most Bitcoin inflows to cryptocurrency exchanges. CryptoQuant’s exchange whale ratio stood at 0.99 at the time of the report, meaning about 99% of BTC deposited to exchanges is currently coming from the 10 largest individual transfers. The analytics platform describes a high exchange whale ratio as historically bearish because large deposits are more likely to precede significant sell orders than normal retail activity. The market is watching concentration, not just one wallet, and that makes every outsized movement feel louder.

The whale transfer also comes as spot Bitcoin ETF demand looks uneven. US-listed spot Bitcoin ETFs recorded $197 million in net weekly inflows leading up to Friday, offering some relief after sustained pressure. Yet the same products saw $4.51 billion in net outflows in June, their worst month on record, according to Farside Investors data cited in the report. The backdrop is cautiously supportive but unresolved, because ETF inflows may help absorb supply only if they persist. For now, one old wallet has not changed the market by itself, but it has sharpened the question of whether whales are preparing to distribute into any recovery or deeper market rebound soon as liquidity tests old holders’ patience across exchanges again now.

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