On-chain data shows the Bitcoin whales have been buying the dip, as their addresses have surged back towards pre-crash levels again.
Looks like the value of the metric has spiked in recent days | Source: @ali_charts on X
As displayed in the above graph, the whale address count observed a large drop around the time of the asset’s crash a few days back, where the price plummeted from the $29,000 level to below the $26,000 mark.
This decline in the number of addresses of these humongous investors would imply that some members of this cohort participated in distribution during the crash.
These whales who participated in the selloff didn’t necessarily clear out their entire holdings and exit the market, though, as distribution just enough to bring their address balances below the 1,000 BTC mark would still lead to a drawdown in the indicator.
Initially, following the crash, the number of these large Bitcoin holders remained flat, implying that there wasn’t any significant accumulation or distribution taking place.
In the past few days, however, the BTC whale address count has registered a sharp spike, suggesting that more whale-sized addresses have popped up on the network. With this uplift, the indicator has returned back to about the same values as it was before the price crash had occurred.
The whales participating in buying at the current price lows is naturally a positive sign for the cryptocurrency, as it could provide a more solid foundation for a rebound in the asset’s value.
BTC appears to have been moving sideways around the $26,000 level recently | Source: BTCUSD on TradingView