When BlackRock moved almost $100 million worth of Bitcoin [BTC] and ether [ETH] for Coinbase, the immediate reaction was fear of a sell-off. However, it’s not that simple.
The company deposited 930 BTC worth $65.48 million and 12,687 ETH worth $27.75 million into Coinbase, with more deposits likely.


However, these transfers are most likely part of ETF operations, where assets are routinely shifted between cold storage and exchanges to manage inflows, outflows and rebalancing.
Rather than signaling a dump, this reflects how major institutions operate in crypto today.
But even if the intent is not bearish, the short-term effect can still be negative. When large amounts of crypto are moved to exchanges like Coinbase Prime, it increases the chances of selling.
This increases pressure on prices and can lead to panic or rapid declines, especially if the market is already in the ‘Extreme Fear’ zone.


When should you actually worry?
Needless to say: one transfer alone isn’t a huge red flag, but it does become worrisome when a pattern forms. This pattern includes repeated large deposits, consistent ETF outflows, and price declines on high volumes.
If these signals appear together, it could indicate real institutional selling pressure. Simply put, for now the market may just be cautious and not panicking.
Institutions like BlackRock adjust their positions while retail traders react quickly to price movements, creating an unstable market.
Market trends are difficult and everywhere
Even though BlackRock shares are strongCrypto prices have fallen. At the time of writing, Bitcoin was down around 4%, with Ethereum even lower more.
In fact, prices move up and down quickly, evidence of short-term emotional trading rather than long-term confidence.
Ethereum in particular has seen sharp swings due to leveraged transactions. Indicators such as RSI show that even small rallies do not last long.


Furthermore, the MVRV ratio showed that the market was stuck in a cycle, where prices rose briefly, traders took profits and prices fell again. In fact, neither buyers nor sellers seemed to be in control of the situation.


Additionally, BlackRock’s Bitcoin ETF (IBIT) traded at $33.9 million on March 18 outflowending a seven-day inflow streak, while the Ethereum ETF (ETHA) included a smaller outflow of $1.3 million.
These amounts may seem small, but likely explain why BlackRock moved assets to Coinbase to sell them and meet investor withdrawals.
Not the first time…
This is not new. A similar move took place in December 2025 when more than $125 million worth of Bitcoin was sent to Coinbase under the same circumstances. So this isn’t panic selling, it’s just a response to investors pulling money out.
Instead of guessing whether BlackRock is bullish or bearish, the most important thing to look at is the ETF outflows. If the pullbacks continue, selling pressure in the market is likely to continue.
Final summary
- BlackRock’s $100 million transfer isn’t a panic sell, but a market move driven by ETF inflows and outflows.
- Until demand returns, ETF-driven selling pressure will likely keep markets depressed.
