Large deposits to centralized exchanges do not always signal selling. But three identical transactions in two hours from the same asset tend to get attention.
Santiment’s whale watcher data flagged three separate Worldcoin deposits to centralized exchanges within a two-hour window on March 21, each valued at $3.4 million. The three transactions combined represent $10.2 million in WLD moved to exchange infrastructure in a compressed timeframe. Two of the three deposits landed on OKX, with the third routed to Bybit. The sending addresses differ across the first and second transactions, though two of the three share the partial address identifier 0x10…a617, suggesting they originated from the same wallet or a closely related cluster.
Exchange deposits from wallets of this size are tracked because they represent potential sell-side supply entering liquid markets. A single large deposit can reflect portfolio rebalancing, collateral movement, or preparation for an over-the-counter transaction rather than open-market selling. Three deposits of identical size within two hours narrows those interpretations. The pattern is consistent with coordinated positioning rather than routine treasury management.
Worldcoin’s market cap percentage column on the dashboard shows each $3.4 million deposit representing approximately 0.34% of total market cap. That ratio places the transactions in a range that is large enough to move thin order books if converted to spot sells, but not large enough to be immediately catastrophic to price structure under normal liquidity conditions.
A separate transaction flagged on the same dashboard shows a $16.2 million Ethereum deposit to OKX, recorded approximately 18 hours prior to the Worldcoin activity. The wallet label on the Santiment dashboard identifies the depositor as a known OKX-affiliated address, which places that transaction in a different interpretive category from the Worldcoin cluster. It is noted here for completeness rather than as a parallel sell signal.
The more structurally interesting flows involve Tether Gold and Paxos Gold. The dashboard shows a $7.9 million Tether Gold deposit to Bybit within the seven-hour window preceding the Worldcoin transactions, followed by multiple Paxos Gold deposits to OKX totaling approximately $10.4 million across four transactions in a 34-minute period. Two additional Tether Gold deposits of $2.4 million each reached OKX within the same broader window, with a third $2.4 million Tether Gold transfer also recorded.
Gold-backed stablecoin deposits to centralized exchanges carry a different implication than native crypto deposits. These assets track the price of physical gold and are typically held as a store of value or hedge rather than speculative positions. Large movements into exchange infrastructure can reflect anticipated gold liquidation, collateral rotation, or positioning ahead of spot gold trades. The clustering of Paxos Gold transactions within 34 minutes from wallets tagged as top-100 balance holders on the Santiment dashboard adds weight to the rotation interpretation.
Taken together, the March 21 whale activity on Santiment’s dashboard reflects two distinct flows arriving in the same window. The Worldcoin deposits represent concentrated sell-side pressure potential from a mid-cap asset. The gold-backed stablecoin movements suggest large holders repositioning out of inflation hedges, which is consistent with broader macro conditions where gold has been under pressure.
Whether the Worldcoin deposits resulted in active selling or were absorbed by existing demand is not visible from deposit data alone. Deposit data identifies intent and positioning. Price action in the hours following these transactions is where the actual impact registers.
The post Worldcoin Whales Moved $10.2M to Exchanges in Two Hours: Gold-Backed Stablecoins Followed appeared first on ETHNews.



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