Thursday, April 16, 2026

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Bitcoin whales just bought the most BTC since 2013

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Bitcoin has spent much of 2026 moving between recovery attempts and macro shocks, yet one part of the market has kept moving in a single direction. Large holders have been buying.

On April 16, Bitfinex highlighted CryptoQuant data showing whales accumulated 270,000 BTC over the previous 30 days, the largest buying spree since 2013, while exchange reserves fell to their lowest level since December 2017.

That combination carries more weight than usual, pointing to a market where available supply is thinning beneath the surface, even while price remains far below the October 2025 all-time high of $126,198.

CryptoQuant chart tracking Bitcoin spot average order size from 2017 to 2026, with color-coded markers highlighting periods dominated by large whale orders, small whale orders, retail orders, and normal market activity.

As of press time, CryptoSlate’s Bitcoin data page shows BTC trading near $74,500, up 0.9% over 24 hours, 3.3% over seven days, and 0.7% over 30 days. Market capitalization stands near $1.5 trillion, and 24-hour volume is just above $41.2 billion.

Market Cap $1.49T

24h Volume $41.64B

All-Time High $126,198.07

Those numbers describe a market that has regained balance after a bruising first quarter, though they only show part of the supply picture that the CryptoQuant chart is starting to expose. Price has recovered enough to draw fresh attention, while the deeper change sits in where the coins are and who holds them.

Coins on exchanges are available for quick sale. Coins moved into colder, longer-duration hands take more time and stronger conviction to bring back into the market.

When that transfer happens at scale, price can stay quiet for a period and then respond much more sharply once fresh demand pushes into a thinner pool of supply. That is the core development behind the latest whale activity.

Whale accumulation has turned into a supply event

Bitcoin often treats whale accumulation as a sentiment clue, a sign that larger holders expect stronger prices later. The April 16 signal points to something more concrete in market plumbing.

When whales absorb that much BTC in 30 days as exchange balances collapse, the central issue becomes inventory. A market with fewer readily available coins behaves differently once buying pressure arrives.

CryptoSlate reported in February that accumulator addresses received 66,940 BTC in a single day after a liquidation shock, a move worth roughly $4.7 billion at the time. Later that month, CryptoSlate showed whales had added 200,000 BTC in a month, even as short-term demand faded and the market struggled to regain momentum.

The setup was already established. The April 16 CryptoQuant signal extends it and sharpens it.

Persistence is the key change. A one-day spike can reflect custody reshuffling or balance-sheet management. A 30-day accumulation run of 270,000 BTC, paired with seven-year-low exchange reserves, carries the hallmarks of genuine supply removal.

The math around issuance helps explain why this point in the cycle carries extra weight. Since the April 2024 halving, Bitcoin has produced 3.125 BTC per block, leaving annual supply growth far below prior cycles.

CryptoSlate’s Bitcoin reference data notes that more than 20.02 million BTC have already been mined out of the maximum 21 million. In a market already dealing with a finite float, another 270,000 BTC moving into stronger hands changes the balance between buyers and sellers.

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A breakout still depends on demand, but the threshold for a larger move becomes easier to reach when fewer coins are near the market price.

The current contradiction sits in plain view. Bitcoin remains about 40.77% below its peak, which keeps the chart far from euphoric.

At the same time, the supply side looks far tighter than the price alone suggests. The 30-day return remains below 1%, suggesting the market is marking time. The CryptoQuant chart points in another direction.

Surface calm can coexist with a shrinking pool of available coins, and that combination often creates the conditions for a sharper move later.

It’d be easy to simply say, “whales are bullish,” but that captures only part of what is happening. Bullishness is a view. A smaller pool of readily available coins is a condition.

Conditions shape how markets move once a catalyst appears. If the largest holders continue to absorb supply and exchange reserves keep falling, Bitcoin requires less incremental demand to produce a larger price response.

That is the mechanism behind the current setup, and it explains why this accumulation wave deserves more attention than the average on-chain signal.

ETF flows and treasury buyers are testing a thinner market

Thin supply becomes powerful once demand returns with enough persistence to test it. That is why ETF flows and treasury buying remain central to the next phase.

The broad pattern since February has been uneven, though the direction over the last several sessions has improved. Farside Investors’ daily Bitcoin ETF flow data shows U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs absorbed $471 million on April 6, then swung to a $159 million outflow on April 7, a $93 million outflow on April 8, and then back to $358 million of inflows on April 9, $256 million on April 10, $411 million on April 14, and $186 million on April 15.

That is a buyer base returning in bursts rather than following a straight line.

The weekly fund data tells a similar story. On March 30, CoinShares reported $414 million in digital asset fund outflows, the first weekly outflow in five weeks, as fears around the Iran conflict and a shift in June FOMC expectations hit sentiment.

The United States drove $445 million of those outflows, while Germany and Canada bought into the weakness. Bitcoin products still held a strong year-to-date net inflow position, though the weekly move showed how quickly macro stress can interrupt demand.

Two weeks later, CoinShares’ report showed $1.1 billion of inflows, the strongest weekly total since early January, with Bitcoin alone taking in $871 million. At the same time, trading volumes at $21 billion remained well below the year-to-date average of $31 billion, and short-Bitcoin products still saw meaningful inflows.

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Demand has improved, while conviction remains incomplete and hedging activity continues to play a visible role.

Bitcoin’s public company demand remains active, but is mostly confined to a single company. Strategy’s Bitcoin purchases page shows the company now holds 780,897 BTC at an average acquisition price of $75,577.

Corporate treasury accumulation does not produce the same daily rhythm as ETF flows, though it reaches the same destination. Coins leave the liquid market and move into the hands of those who plan to hold through volatility. If that thesis holds, that is.

Related Reading

Bitcoin treasury trade faces a stress test as debt pressure triggers selling

Corporate and sovereign BTC holders are selling into stress, raising fresh doubts about how durable treasury demand really is.

Apr 4, 2026 · Andjela Radmilac

When ETF inflows, treasury buying, and whale accumulation occur simultaneously, they drain the same pool of spot inventory.

The market has another reason to focus on this setup, because the macro backdrop remains unresolved. Earlier this month, CryptoSlate noted that Bitcoin entered April on firmer footing after a late-March relief rally, though the recovery still faced a macro test tied to Fed expectations and geopolitical risk.

That framework still applies. ETF demand can return, whales can keep buying, and reserves can keep shrinking, while a sharper repricing in rates or renewed geopolitical pressure can still slow the whole machine.

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