Bitcoin Whale Panic Fades: Sell Pressure On Binance Falls Off A Cliff
Bitcoinβs exchange-side supply signal is flashing a notable change: whale-sized transfers into Binance have dropped sharply from late-November panic levels, suggesting large holders are no longer leaning on the sell button with the same urgency.
Selling Pressure From Bitcoin Whales Fade
CryptoQuant contributor Darkfost said current data shows a βclear decline in whale transactions,β specifically BTC inflows to exchanges, meaning βlarge holders are sending significantly less BTC to trading platforms than before.β
In the post, the chart focus was Binance inflows segmented by transaction size, spanning transfers from 100 BTC up to the largest prints above 10,000 BTC, flows that are commonly interpreted as potential sell-side positioning when they hit an exchange.
The key backdrop in Darkfostβs thread is how quickly whale behavior shifted around the marketβs late-2025 drawdown. βDecember has been particularly challenging, even for these investors,β the analyst wrote, adding that whales are typically βmore cautiousβ and βless sensitive to market movements than retail participants,β often acting with βgreater discipline and patience.β
That discipline appeared to crack as Bitcoin rolled over from its latest all-time high near $126,000. Darkfost described a surge in whale inflows to Binance at the end of November as BTC βcontinued its correction,β with the βaverage monthly totalβ reaching βnearly $8 billionβ during a period when BTC βfell back below the $90,000 level.β
βThis phase clearly triggered a panic-driven move,β the post said. βTransactions ranging between 100 and 10,000 BTC increased significantly, especially as price broke below the $85,000 level. This behavior reflects real stress among certain whales, who chose to sell quickly in order to limit losses, thereby reinforcing selling pressure on the market.β
The crux is what changed since that cluster. βToday, the situation looks very different,β Darkfost wrote. Those Binance inflows βhave been divided by three and now stand at around $2.74 billion,β with βdaily movementsβ becoming βfar less frequent than during the cluster observed at the end of November.β
The analyst framed the drop as an observable behavioral pivot rather than a single-day anomaly. βThis shift in dynamics suggests that whales have changed their behavior,β Darkfost wrote. βThey are no longer selling aggressively and now appear to favor waiting.β
Institutional Demand Side Remains Robust
While Darkfostβs post focuses on whale-associated inflows as a proxy for potential sell pressure, CryptoQuant CEO Ki Young Ju pointed investors to the other side of the ledger: institutional accumulation.
βInstitutional demand for Bitcoin remains strong,β Ki wrote on X. βUS custody wallets typically hold 100β1,000 BTC each. Excluding exchanges and miners, this gives a rough read on institutional demand. ETF holdings included.β
Ki added that β577K BTC ($53B) [was] added over the past year, and still flowing in,β characterizing the trend as ongoing rather than a completed wave.
At press time, Bitcoin traded at $90,885.
