Governments (e.g., US ~210,000 BTC from seizures) hold large amounts but rarely trade actively. Broader Picture Major trades today are driven more by institutional flows (ETFs, corporates like Strategy, hedge funds) than pure anonymous whales. Exchanges like Binance and Coinbase route most retail/institutional order flow, while OTC desks handle the biggest whale/institutional deals off-exchange to minimize slippage. Large sells from over-leveraged positions or ETF outflows can cascade, but no one "controls" Bitcoin outright—the market is still shaped by supply/demand across thousands of participants. Concentration has increased since 2024 ETF approvals, shifting influence toward Wall Street-style players. $BTC #USGovernment #ETFvsBTC #OTC #exchanges
No single entity "controls" major Bitcoin trades in a centralized way—Bitcoin remains a decentralized network where trades occur peer-to-peer or via exchanges. However, major trades (large-volume buys/sells that can influence price) are heavily influenced by a small number of concentrated holders and platforms. Key Players Influencing Major Bitcoin Trades (as of early 2026) Large Institutional Holders and ETFs Spot Bitcoin ETFs (especially from traditional finance giants) now hold massive amounts and drive significant buy/sell flows through creations/redemptions. Their trades often move the market due to scale. BlackRock's iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT) holds around 760,000–780,000 BTC (one of the single largest concentrated holders). Fidelity and other ETFs add hundreds of thousands more BTC collectively. Institutions/ETFs together control roughly 6–7%+ of circulating supply, with ongoing inflows/outflows creating substantial trading pressure. Corporate Treasury Holders Public companies (especially "Bitcoin treasury" strategies) execute very large buys, often in the open market or OTC. Strategy (formerly MicroStrategy) holds over 670,000–713,000 BTC, the largest corporate holder by far. Their accumulation (and occasional adjustments) can sway sentiment and price. Exchanges (Custodial Wallets) Major centralized exchanges hold enormous Bitcoin reserves (mostly customer funds in cold/hot wallets), facilitating huge trades. Coinbase: ~885,000 BTC (top exchange custodian). Binance: ~629,000–650,000 BTC. These handle the bulk of spot and derivatives trading volume globally. Binance often dominates daily/spot volume (sometimes 30–40%+ market share), followed by others like OKX, Bybit, Coinbase, and Upbit. "Whales" (Large Individual/Anonymous Holders) Satoshi Nakamoto's estimated ~1.1 million BTC (dormant, so minimal direct trading impact today). Other whales (addresses with 1,000+ BTC, sometimes 10,000+) include early adopters, but new "institutional whales" (corporates/ETFs) now often outpace older ones in active influence. #BTC $BTC #market_tips #bitcoin
#plasma $XPL $XPL for $0.08: Is it the bottom or a gift from below? 🤡 So, Plasma holders, how's the mood? While we were being told about the "future of stablecoins" and the "Tron killer," the token quietly updated its All-Time Low to $0.073. Remember September 2025: price $1.68, hype, promises. And today? We have -95% from the peak. But the most interesting part is yesterday's "festival" of liquidations. $8 million in a day just vanished into thin air when the price broke through another "concrete" support. Let's be honest: Does anyone really believe that with a market capitalization of $180 million and a constant sell-off from market makers, this project will survive? Or is it just another shitcoin that the team uses as an ATM? I personally see only "exit liquidity" of retail buyers. Faith in the project is dwindling, especially when you see how $8 million liquidated those who naively "bought the bottom" at $0.13. Question to the audience: Who still holds this "diamond" in their portfolio? 💎🤲 Or has everyone already locked in losses and moved to normal L2s? Write in the comments, I'm curious how many of us "optimists" are still left. 👇 #plasma @Plasma $XPL
This is literally the follow through I was warning about $BTC.
We lost the 100-week EMA (yellow), tried to hang around it, and then got rejected… and now price has slid hard to 60K.
Same vibe as the last cycle: support flips to resistance, and the market uses that level to keep squeezing late longs before it finally finds a real floor.
If $BTC can’t reclaim that 100W EMA quickly with a clean weekly close back above 86K, then I’m treating every bounce into that zone as a exit bounce and more chop/pain while it builds a base.
Strong reaction so far off the 60K range lows. This area marked the bottom of the previous 6 month accumulation range (We held this area multiple times)
The key zone to watch now is the 70–76K range, the prior S/R and the point where price would re-accept into the previous range.
Bottoms rarely form in a straight V-shaped recovery, so if we see rejection from this box, there’s a high probability of renewed acceptance lower and a move back down.
In crypto, there is the concept of 'Finality'. This is the moment when a transaction can no longer be canceled or altered. For banks trading assets in millions, this is a matter of life and death. 🔴 The issue of 'probability' Bitcoin: You need to wait ~60 minutes (6 confirmations) to be sure.