Over the past week, wallets linked to key Bitcoin participants grabbed more than 16,000 BTC during a price decline.
At the same time, retail investors have been selling into weakness, taking losses and widening the gap between whales and small traders.
Analysts see this as a possible clue that the market could be forming a local bottom.
For some, a cut signals potential relief for risk assets. For others, the historic pattern overshadows any short-term optimism. Either way, volatility seems unavoidable.
Amid this macro backdrop, a single transaction set off alarms. BlackRock shifted over 10,584 BTC—valued close to $1.20 billion—to Coinbase in one day.
That kind of move rarely goes unnoticed. Transfers to exchanges often imply a readiness to sell, and the market responded immediately.
Traders are now watching that number like hawks, questioning if it can act as a safety net once more.
Technical signals, however, don’t tell a unified story. The relative strength index sits at 32.90, scraping the oversold zone, which can sometimes hint at an exhausted sell-off.
But the MACD is still weak, with its line staying under the signal mark, suggesting negative momentum. This split in indicators keeps traders guessing whether the next big move will be up or down.
If $112,000 holds, a rebound is on the table. Break it, and the downside could accelerate, especially if institutions start unloading more Bitcoin.
Add whale accumulation, seasonal weakness, and a looming Fed decision, and the short-term outlook looks less like a straight line and more like a curve with surprises waiting around the bend.
For now, the battle is clear. It’s between confidence and fear, and the outcome may depend on what happens before this month closes.
Featured image from Unsplash, chart from TradingView