Percentage of BTC held on exchanges drops to a four-year low of 8.7% in October as whales have been accumulating
According to data from the crypto market analytics platform סאַנטימענט, the percentage of the circulating supply of Bitcoin (BTC) held on crypto exchanges has dropped significantly so far in October.
With more and more coins getting transferred out of exchanges, the trading venues now hold only 8.7% of the circulating supply of BTC. This matches levels last seen in November 2018, Santiment notes.
In contrast, the data shows that the supply of Ether (ETH) on exchanges saw an upsurge before the Merge last month. ETH held on exchanges stands at 14.5% of its circulating supply. While this is still relatively high, it is a drop from around 16% reached late last month during the merge hype.
📊 # ביטקאָין איז געזען מער און מער קאָינס מאָווינג אַוועק פון יקסטשיינדזשיז אין די חודש פון אקטאבער, וואָס ריכטן לעוועלס לעצט געזען אין נאוועמבער, 2018. דערווייַל, # עטהערעוםס צושטעלן איז פלאַקטשוייטיד אַ ביסל העכער נאָך אַ גרויס ינפלאַקס אריבערגעפארן צו יקסטשיינדזשיז איידער די # מערדזש. https://t.co/qsDjnJVnO6 pic.twitter.com/cX16YWFFzK
- סאַנטימענט (@antimentfeed) אקטאבער קסנומקס, קסנומקס
What is the likelihood of whale manipulation?
The trend in the supply of the two leading crypto tokens ties in with increased whale activity in their markets. As previously אנגעוויזן by Santiment, whale wallets holding between 100 and 10,000 BTC cumulatively added 46,173 BTC in a one-week period ending October 5.
The trend was noted as a rarity for the market in 2022. Similarly, an analyst on the CryptoQuant platform alleged that ETH whales may have been manipulating the market with their exchange activities.
However, the argument stands debatable as despite the exchange exodus the prices of BTC and ETH have continued to swing. BTC is trading at around $19,000, down 6.2% in the last week. Similarly, ETH is trading at about $1280, down 5.5% in the same time frame per data from קאָונמאַרקעטקאַפּ.
Source: https://u.today/more-bitcoins-to-exit-market-whale-manipulation-in-play