Bitcoin’s recent price weakness masks a clear difference in on-chain behavior. While smaller holders steadily accumulate BTC during dips, medium-sized portfolios remain largely inactive.
This is evident from data from Santiment wallets with 0.1–1 BTC have increased their collective balance to a 15 months high. They added roughly 1.05% more BTC since October’s price spike.
This accumulation trend has continued even as Bitcoin trades well below its late 2025 highs. It suggests that retail participants view the downturn as an opportunity rather than a warning sign.
On the other hand wallets with 1–10 BTC – often seen as more conviction-driven middle market participants – are moving in the opposite direction.

Source: Santiment
This cohort now has BTC balances near a 38 months low, reducing exposure by approx 0.49% over the same period. The lack of sustained accumulation in this group suggests a cautious attitude rather than outright capitulation.
Small holders are intervening, medium portfolios remain cautious
The difference indicates redistribution rather than broad accumulation. Santiments Data shows that Bitcoin supply is gradually shifting from medium-sized wallets to smaller holders.
The pattern is often visible during extended consolidation phases, when confidence is uneven across market segments.
Historically, stronger recoveries tend to coincide with the participation of middle-class portfolios, which often act as a bridge between retail accumulation and larger institutional flows.
Their continued absence implies that while downward pressure is easing, conviction remains fragile.
Bitcoin SOPR data reinforces behavioral divides
CryptoQuant’s spent output profit ratio [SOPR] Statistics further underline this difference.
Long-term holder SOPR has fallen toward or below neutral 1.0 level. This indicates that long-term investors are increasingly moving coins at breakeven or slight losses – a sign of stress, but not panic-driven selling.

Source: CryptoQuant
SOPR for the short-term holder remains volatile and frequent below 1.0. This suggests that recent buyers are still taking losses during price swings, contributing to a choppy downward move.

Source: CryptoQuant
This combination points to a market in which smaller participants are absorbing the downward momentum. At the same time, larger, mid-cap bondholders continue to wait for clearer confirmation of a trend reversal.
What this means for Bitcoin’s short-term structure
The current setup reflects a market caught between accumulation and hesitation. Small wallets are steadily absorbing supply, limiting sharp sell-offs.
Still, the lack of participation from mid-market investors reduces the likelihood of a strong, sustained recovery in the near term.
Until mid-market wallets get back on track – either through renewed accumulation or increased transaction activity – Bitcoin will likely remain range-bound, with rallies struggling to gain traction and dips continuing to attract incremental buying rather than capitulation.
Final summary
- Small Bitcoin portfolios consistently buy dips, indicating accumulation of the base.
- The lack of participation from medium-sized investors indicates that the recovery momentum remains limited for the time being.
