On December 1, a notable transaction emerged from a wallet inactive for over 11 years. The anonymous owner transferred 11 BTC (approximately $1.07 million), drawing attention from the analytics platform Whale Alert.
💤 A dormant address containing 11 #BTC (1,071,468 USD) has just been activated after 11.6 years!https://t.co/m9TDE5s8dO
— Whale Alert (@whale_alert) December 1, 2024
A day earlier, on November 30, another long-dormant wallet holder moved 13 BTC (~$1.26 million) to a new address after 11 years of inactivity. Back in 2013, when these coins were received, their value was around $5,850.
💤 A dormant address containing 13 #BTC (1,256,544 USD) has just been activated after 11.0 years (worth 5,850 USD in 2013)!https://t.co/2FbtrR27c8
— Whale Alert (@whale_alert) November 30, 2024
On the same day, an even larger transaction was identified. A prominent investor shifted 429 BTC (around $41.7 million) from a wallet that had been inactive for nearly 11 years.
💤 💤 💤 💤 💤 A dormant address containing 429 #BTC (41,707,628 USD) has just been activated after 10.9 years!https://t.co/iJ1j1CwmCj
— Whale Alert (@whale_alert) November 30, 2024
Despite these movements, most whales continue to avoid centralized exchanges for selling. On the contrary, analysts have observed a steady trend of large Bitcoin withdrawals from CEX platforms.
🚨 🚨 🚨 520 #BTC (50,109,820 USD) transferred from #Kraken to unknown wallethttps://t.co/FtMfTd8ha0
— Whale Alert (@whale_alert) December 1, 2024
Alex Adler, an analyst at CryptoQuant, noted that major Bitcoin holders (those with over 1,000 BTC) remain cautious about selling. On-chain data shows that the average daily inflow of Bitcoin from whales to exchanges is currently modest, hovering around 5,000 BTC.
Major players are not rushing to sell their coins!
— Axel 💎🙌 Adler Jr (@AxelAdlerJr) November 29, 2024
The average exchange inflow (SMA-30D) of whales is just over 5K BTC per day.
Draw your own conclusions. pic.twitter.com/VQ70B6jSN7
Recent activity from long-dormant wallets isn’t new. In November, a wallet inactive for 14 years moved 2,000 BTC to a new address. In October, another whale transferred coins mined back in 2009, valued at $3.58 million. Additionally, a wallet untouched since Bitcoin’s inception shifted 50 BTC (~$3.4 million).
Conclusion: While whales are showing signs of activity, their behavior suggests a redistribution of holdings rather than a rush to sell. For now, the market remains stable as these key players exercise patience.