Bitcoin‘s market activity has exhibited a stalemate, remaining between the $78,000 and $82,000 mark recently, despite burgeoning institutional interest. This plateau comes as spot Bitcoin ETFs and major entities show buoyant buying action. The slowdown in price movements has been ascribed primarily to transfers from old, sizeable Bitcoin wallets, with origins in the cryptocurrency’s nascent phase.
Is Institutional Interest at an All-Time Peak?
Institutional entities have revealed an unprecedented appetite for Bitcoin. In a recent move, a notable strategy firm acquired 24,869 BTC at an approximate rate of $80,985 each within just a week, escalating its holdings to a striking 843,738 BTC, translating to approximately $63.8 billion in market worth.
Spot Bitcoin ETFs have been on a hefty acquisition spree, amassing close to 19,000 BTC across nine trading days in April. Notably, BlackRock’s ETF enjoyed over $66 billion in inflows since inception, with an eye-catching single-day inflow observed on May 1, totaling $630 million.
Why the Stagnation Despite Brisk Buying?
The visible enthusiasm among institutional buyers hasn’t elevated Bitcoin’s price due to “old whale” wallets reactivating and releasing a significant volume of BTC. Alphractal notes that retail investors have been notably purchasing, yet the whales have been net sellers, indicating a strategic distribution rather than a frantic sell-off.
The steadiness of BTC prices, despite ETF and corporate accumulation, is being explained by discreet, over-the-counter (OTC) sales from dormant whale wallets, which limit the impact on public exchange prices.
A notable instance occurred on May 11 when a long-inactive wallet from 2013 released 500 BTC. Metrics indicate that 72% of such transfers in 2026 from wallets inactive for seven years or more were executed via OTC transactions. Since the recent Bitcoin halving, about 38,400 BTC have been moved from long-dormant wallets, which mirrors the recent ETF buying interest.
The period saw ETF investments enabling a conduit for early adopters to liquidate holdings, while new demands intersected with old supplies, maintaining price stability within a narrow bandwidth.
- Institutional acquisitions have had a substantial inflow of $66 billion into ETFs.
- Old whale wallets have released a total of 38,400 BTC since the Bitcoin halving.
- Data reflect OTC trades as a preferred exit route, minimizing disruptions on exchange prices.
Alphractal predicts that with the eventual downturn of these whale wallet sales, Bitcoin’s price might experience upwards momentum as institutional buyer interest remains hearty. However, during this phase, prices are expected to hover within the current range, highlighting a volatile yet constrained trading atmosphere.



