Large Bitcoin holders have started reducing exposure, but on-chain data suggests the broader market is not yet in a distribution phase.
According to data from CryptoQuant, addresses holding between 1,000 and 10,000 BTC have reduced their balances by approximately 220,000 BTC year-over-year. This is the fastest decline since early 2023.

Source: CryptoQuant
The trend indicates that big investors are no longer accumulating aggressively during dips, even as Bitcoin is near its cycle high.
Historically, similar rollovers have appeared in whaling companies prior to major market tops. However, additional indicators along the chain indicate that the current environment is materially different from that of previous late-cycle phases.
Bitcoin whale sales are rising, but without panic signals
The decline in the whale balance reflects a sustained but moderate decline rather than a sharp liquidation. While the pace of reduction has accelerated, the data does not indicate disorderly selling or forced exits.
In previous cycles, periods of high whale dispersal have typically been accompanied by a sharp increase in spending by long-term holders. That dynamic has not yet emerged.
Long-term holders remain largely inactive
Data from Glass junction shows that Bitcoin’s value days have been destroyed [VDD] Multiple remains firmly in the low band, around 0.52.
This metric measures whether older, long-held coins are being issued, a behavior that has historically coincided with market tops.

Source: Glassnode
Low VDD values indicate that long-term holders are not moving the dormant supply. This indicates limited persuasive selling and moderate distribution pressure.
During previous cycle peaks, VDD typically rose to elevated zones as older coins came back into circulation.
The current divergence – declining whale balances alongside muted long-term keeper activity – signals a rotation rather than a large-scale exit.
Rotation, not distribution
Taken together, the data suggests that some large investors could reduce their exposure, reallocate capital or adjust their positioning without widening supply.
This pattern is consistent with a consolidation phase, in which the market digests previous gains rather than rejecting higher prices outright.
Unlike the 2021-2022 cycle, where whale sales coincided with aggressive long-term holder distribution, the current setup shows older coins remaining largely untouched.
That distinction reduces the chance that the current decline in whaling reflects a large-scale top formation.
The market absorbs gains as the Bitcoin structure holds
Bitcoin’s price has remained resilient despite the decline in whale accumulation. This reinforces the impression that the selling pressure is being absorbed by the market.
At the time of writing, BTC was trading around $91,000, with a slight increase.
With long-term bonds largely inactive, the data points to a structurally constructive environment even as upside momentum cools.
Going forward, analysts will keep an eye on whether long-term holder behavior changes.
A continued increase in VDD would indicate a shift toward broader distribution. For now, the picture suggests that while the whales have taken a step back, the conviction among long-term owners remains intact.
Final thoughts
- Bitcoin whale balances are declining, but the absence of long-term higher spending suggests rotation rather than broad spread.
- With Value Days Destroyed remaining low, the market appears to be consolidating gains rather than signaling a cycle top.
