“OG Bitcoin whales are dumping,” is the overarching narrative surrounding the latest Bitcoin selloff. Yet, amid nonstop chatter that Bitcoin’s earliest supporters are behind its latest price slide, on-chain analyst Willy Woo points to “nuance” in the metrics. On-chain moves don’t tell the full story; the old-guard may not be caving in just yet.
Charles Edwards of Capriole Investments published a chart painting 2025 as a “very colorful” year for whale activity, with a string of $100 million and $500 million Bitcoin spends traced from addresses untouched for more than seven years. He concluded:
OG Bitcoin whales are dumping
Over 1 million BTC have moved since June, dramatically outpacing prior cycles and handing analysts the simple conclusion that whales are cashing out. Alex Krüger highlighted how this pattern marks a break from previous market cycles. Whale selling has been steady for nearly 12 months, contributing to Bitcoin’s underperformance against other risk assets. He stated:
Horizon’s Joe Consorti chimed in, posting:
He noted how much the market has changed as Bitcoin’s early advocates are giving way to TradFi giants like JPMorgan, and “99.5% of funds in the spot bitcoin ETFs haven’t sold in this 20% drawdown”
And while insiders appear to be fleeing like rats from a sinking ship, senior ETF analyst at Bloomberg, Eric Balchunas, points out that the “boomer” Bitcoin ETF buyers are holding strong. Bitcoin ETFs have seen less than $1 billion in outflows, even as spot Bitcoin fell 20%. He questioned:
Yet amid the supposed avalanche of OG selling, Willy Woo, widely respected for on-chain analytics, cautions against reading every movement of ancient coins as dumping. His analysis points out three key things often misinterpreted as sales but which may have nothing to do with price-driven liquidation:
Woo points out that on-chain data only shows coins “moving,” not the real-world intent behind the transaction. So while headline charts point to OG Bitcoin whales “dumping,” the resilience of price under this massive movement highlights market absorption and deeper reasons than just whales cashing out.
Data from Capriole, Bloomberg, and top traders all confirm heavy OG activity, but ETF outflows remain minimal, and the price, while pressured, absorbed more than 1 million BTC in sales with far less carnage than past cycles. Not all ancient coin movement is dumping, so pay attention to on-chain nuance rather than the rumors. What you see may not be what you get.
The post On-chain moves don’t tell the full story: Why OG Bitcoin whales may not be cashing out appeared first on CryptoSlate.


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