Bitcoin did not have a great week. Price slipped roughly 6% and is now trading around the $88,000 level, putting pressure back on short-term sentiment. After weeks of steady gains, the pullback has reopened the debate about whether this move is just a pause or the start of something deeper.

We already covered several reasons behind the dip earlier this week, but new developments are adding context to the market’s unease.

At the same time, something very different is happening beneath the surface.

Bitcoin’s largest holders are quietly accumulating.

And that contrast is starting to make bears uncomfortable.

Why Bitcoin Pulled Back This Week

Part of the pressure came from politics rather than charts.

Odds of a U.S. government shutdown by month-end surged to 77% on Polymarket, jumping 67% in just 24 hours. Senate Democrats have vowed to block a funding bill, raising fears of another fiscal standoff in Washington.

For crypto, this matters because it directly delays the CLARITY Act, a major market-structure bill meant to bring long-awaited regulatory clarity. That uncertainty has weighed on prices for weeks and continues to hang over the market.

Another blow came from South Korea.

Prosecutors revealed that roughly $47 million worth of seized Bitcoin went missing after a phishing attack during a routine inspection. The incident exposed serious weaknesses in how authorities secure digital assets, shaking confidence in institutional handling of crypto custody.

These events did not crash the market, but they added to the fragile mood that already existed.

What the Whales Are Doing Instead

While headlines stay heavy, Bitcoin whales are acting in the opposite direction.

Santiment data shows that wallets holding at least 1,000 BTC have collectively added around 104,340 BTC in recent weeks. That represents a 1.5% increase in their total holdings.

At the same time, the number of daily transfers above $1 million has climbed back to two-month highs.

Source: X/@santimentfeed

It points to large players moving capital with intention, not reacting emotionally to short-term price swings.

Santiment’s chart makes this clear. The green line tracking holdings of large wallets has turned sharply upward, now sitting at its highest level since mid-September. Meanwhile, purple bars showing whale transaction counts are also rising, confirming that activity is picking up, not fading.

In simple terms, big money is getting busier while retail sentiment remains cautious.

Why This Matters for Market Direction

Whales tend to accumulate when prices are weak and distribute when prices are strong. That pattern has repeated itself through every major Bitcoin cycle.

This does not mean price must rally immediately. But it does indicate that downside conviction among large holders is limited right now.

If whales believed this pullback marked the start of a deeper correction, accumulation would slow or reverse. Instead, holdings are rising while price drifts lower.

That divergence often shows up near local bottoms, not tops.

It is a strong sign that the risk-reward profile is shifting.

Read also: Here’s How High Ripple’s XRP Price Could Go This Week

Bears Are Now in an Awkward Spot

For bearish traders, this creates a problem.

On the surface, the market looks weak. Bitcoin is down, news flow is negative, and sentiment is cautious. That usually encourages short positioning.

But when large wallets start adding aggressively in that environment, it limits how far downside can realistically extend without a major shock.

If price stabilizes while whales continue to build positions, bears are left shorting into rising demand.

That rarely ends well.

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