Twelve years ago, Bitcoin [BTC] was more of a digital experiment than a financial asset, trading at around $332.
However, as of the 18th of January, 2026, that experiment is fueling one of the most disciplined exit strategies in crypto history.
New data from Lookonchain revealed that a legendary OG holder, who has been sitting on a 5,000 BTC stash for over a decade, has offloaded another 500 BTC worth $47.77 million.
Since December 2024, this whale has been methodically shaving their position at six-figure prices, turning a $1.66 million seed into a half-billion-dollar stash while still retaining half their Bitcoin.
What does this whale movement mean?
This shows that this whale treats their Bitcoin like long-term family wealth and not a risky trade. By selling small amounts, they reduce risk while still keeping plenty of upside.
Instead of selling everything at once and crashing the market, this holder sells during strong demand. That helps them get a high average price of around $106,164 while keeping the market stable.
Market sentiment
Needless to say, in the crypto ecosystem, an ancient whale moving funds is often misread as a sign of trouble. However, the current data suggests a calculated valuation milestone.
Paradoxically, these sales are necessary for the market’s evolution. They provide the supply required for institutional giants, such as Spot ETFs and corporate treasuries, to establish positions.
Without OGs taking profits, the market would lack the liquidity for these new heavyweights to enter.
On-chain insight
To understand if this sale is part of a larger crash, AMBCrypto analyzed Bitcoin’s Coin Days Destroyed (CDD) chart.
Source: Bitbo
This metric measures the economic weight of a transaction. So, for instance, if 1 BTC is held for 100 days and then moved, it destroys 100 coin days.
The chart shows that the CDD spiked in November 2025 when Bitcoin fell from its $126,000 all-time high, showing that many long-term holders were selling at once.
Now things have cooled down. CDD has dropped to around 9.96 million, much lower than recent highs.
This means most older holders have stopped selling. While a few early investors are still active, institutions appear to be absorbing the remaining supply.
The exchange whale ratio
On the other hand, while the CDD showed that the old hands are calming down, the Exchange Whale Ratio, which was 0.657 at press time, painted a more volatile short-term picture.
Source: CryptoQuant
This ratio tracks the top 10 largest Bitcoin inflows relative to the total.
Historically, any value above 0.5 is a red flag. At 0.65%, over two-thirds of all Bitcoin entering exchanges is coming from just 10 massive entities.
This suggests that retail demand has cooled, leaving the price vulnerable to the whims of a few large players.
Ergo, a falling CDD and a rising Whale Ratio point to a top-heavy market.
Most long-term selling is over, but prices near $95,201 are still under pressure from a small number of large sellers.
2026: a new year for crypto
As we move through the first month of 2026, the data tells a story of a massive structural reset.
The selling pressure that defined late 2025, driven by long-term holder exits, ETF outflows, and wiped-out leverage, has largely been exhausted.
In its place, a new foundation has emerged.
Mid-January 2026 data shows that institutions have absorbed 30,000 BTC from the market, nearly five times the 5,700 BTC freshly minted by miners in the same period.
Final Thoughts
- Bitcoin is quietly shifting from early holders to institutions as selling fades and demand grows.
- Institutional buyers are quietly taking over the supply, absorbing Bitcoin faster than it is being mined.
Source: https://ambcrypto.com/a-12-year-bitcoin-og-is-selling-but-the-market-isnt-panicking/


