Christmas has just passed, and a major on-chain news has instantly stirred the entire crypto market. A large holder who has held ETH for up to eight years suddenly moved—transferring 143,000 ETH to multiple unknown wallets overnight, which at current prices directly cashes out over 3.2 billion USD, causing ETH price to plummet and approach 2800.
This is not just a typical retail investor cutting losses. The player behind this has a significant background—entered the scene as early as 2015 during ETH's ICO, with a cost basis of less than 1 USD per coin. Since then, it has been like a nail hammered in place, known in the market as the "ETH Fossil." Historically, whenever this guy shifts positions, the market trembles accordingly. In 2016, selling 14,000 ETH directly drove ETH from 10 USD down to 6 USD; in 2023, offloading 15,500 ETH triggered a 15% plunge. But this time, with 143,000 ETH, it’s the largest move ever made by this entity.
What’s even more eye-catching is the transfer method. Dispersed into multiple wallets, this pattern usually indicates two possibilities: either gradually accumulating and cashing out in stages or a large-scale rebalancing. Either way, short-term selling pressure is inevitable.
Some might say that whale dumping is nothing new, but the timing this time is particularly noteworthy. Look at the current macro environment—US Q3 GDP growth rate surged to 4.3%, far exceeding market expectations. The probability of the Federal Reserve cutting interest rates in January has been pushed back to 13%, with high-interest rate expectations strongly returning. In this context, capital was already pushing risk asset valuations lower, and a major whale’s large exit move amplifies the impact several times. Whether this signal can determine your holdings’ fate next year remains uncertain, but at least it warrants serious consideration.
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OnchainFortuneTeller
· 12h ago
Living fossils are really going all out this time, directly dumping 143,000 coins. I think this move is more than just cashing out.
I see through that scattered wallet move; this guy is obviously running.
The probability of the Federal Reserve cutting interest rates directly hits 13%? That timing is just perfect, high interest rates are killing valuations.
If 2800 can't hold, how much lower can it go?
After this signal, I need to reassess my positions for next year; I'm a bit shaken.
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DAOdreamer
· 12h ago
Damn, this guy is really ruthless. After eight years of being a stubborn holdout, he finally sold out. 3.2 billion, that's not a small number...
This move is definitely a bit aggressive. The dispersed transfer method clearly indicates an attempt to run...
The probability of the Federal Reserve cutting interest rates has dropped to 13%. With high interest rates returning, risk assets are already under pressure. Now, with this huge whale making such a move, a short-term explosion is inevitable.
If they really start cashing out in batches, there's still more to watch for.
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GateUser-bd883c58
· 12h ago
Living fossils need to run? Then us retail investors really have to hold on... 3.2 billion gone overnight, who can bear this pressure
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PoetryOnChain
· 12h ago
Wow, this living fossil is making such a big move this time, I'm a bit nervous... Running with 3.2 billion directly? This pace doesn't feel right.
This move is really ruthless, dispersing across multiple wallets, no one knows what the intention is. The selling pressure this wave probably can't be escaped.
The high-interest rate expectation is back, and the whales are quickly escaping... There's something to this.
But to be honest, retail investors just have to take the hits. It still depends on how the macro plays out.
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AirdropGrandpa
· 13h ago
Wow, here we go again? As soon as this guy moves, the market trembles. Truly incredible. 3.2 billion was directly cashed out, and I just want to know if there are any follow-up sell-offs.
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SchroedingerAirdrop
· 13h ago
This time is really different, the living fossil directly dumped the market
Selling so aggressively, bulls and bears both shivering
Dispersed transfers, anyone would have to think twice
The probability of the Federal Reserve cutting interest rates has dropped to 13%, this is the real killer move
143,000 coins, the first time since 2015 to be this aggressive
What about next year? It depends on whether the whales will continue to act
In a high-interest environment, no one wants risky assets anymore
This escape signal from the living fossil can be directly used as a warning
Christmas has just passed, and a major on-chain news has instantly stirred the entire crypto market. A large holder who has held ETH for up to eight years suddenly moved—transferring 143,000 ETH to multiple unknown wallets overnight, which at current prices directly cashes out over 3.2 billion USD, causing ETH price to plummet and approach 2800.
This is not just a typical retail investor cutting losses. The player behind this has a significant background—entered the scene as early as 2015 during ETH's ICO, with a cost basis of less than 1 USD per coin. Since then, it has been like a nail hammered in place, known in the market as the "ETH Fossil." Historically, whenever this guy shifts positions, the market trembles accordingly. In 2016, selling 14,000 ETH directly drove ETH from 10 USD down to 6 USD; in 2023, offloading 15,500 ETH triggered a 15% plunge. But this time, with 143,000 ETH, it’s the largest move ever made by this entity.
What’s even more eye-catching is the transfer method. Dispersed into multiple wallets, this pattern usually indicates two possibilities: either gradually accumulating and cashing out in stages or a large-scale rebalancing. Either way, short-term selling pressure is inevitable.
Some might say that whale dumping is nothing new, but the timing this time is particularly noteworthy. Look at the current macro environment—US Q3 GDP growth rate surged to 4.3%, far exceeding market expectations. The probability of the Federal Reserve cutting interest rates in January has been pushed back to 13%, with high-interest rate expectations strongly returning. In this context, capital was already pushing risk asset valuations lower, and a major whale’s large exit move amplifies the impact several times. Whether this signal can determine your holdings’ fate next year remains uncertain, but at least it warrants serious consideration.