Recently, I came across some interesting data and would like to discuss the underlying market logic with everyone.
According to publicly available information, a total of 368 institutional entities worldwide have accumulated over $185 billion in crypto assets. Among them, a leading digital asset management company alone accounts for 73%, and government holdings also exceed a quarter of the total.
What does this indicate? Institutions have long been deploying real capital, and the scale is no longer small-scale testing.
The on-chain data makes this even clearer. In recent months, large wallet holdings have been steadily increasing, and outflows from exchanges are accelerating—what does this mean? Chips are consolidating, liquidity is being locked, and no one is in a rush to sell off.
Institutional strategies differ from retail investors. They are not concerned with weekly fluctuations but focus on the big picture over the next 3-5 years. When institutional holdings exceed 70%, the market’s bottom support becomes entirely different.
In the short term, policy expectations regarding government holdings may cause some volatility. But from a fundamental long-term perspective, with continuous institutional deployment and gradual locking of chips, the market’s bottom is being steadily reinforced.
This is not speculation; the data is speaking—on-chain signals will give early warnings before any turning point occurs. Monitoring the structure of holdings and capital flows is the correct approach to avoid being disturbed by market noise.
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VCsSuckMyLiquidity
· 2h ago
73% concentrated in one hand? This is basically the new big player, just called an institution with a different name.
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WalletsWatcher
· 9h ago
Institutions are already playing a big game, while retail investors are still looking at the daily chart. The gap is quite significant.
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governance_lurker
· 14h ago
73% acquired by one company? That's outrageous, it feels like the market influence is about to be fragmented again.
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FunGibleTom
· 14h ago
73% eaten by a company? That's not called diversified holdings, lol
Institutions are really stockpiling, while retail investors are still catching falling knives at low levels. The gap is too big.
On-chain data speaks loudly, but to be honest, I still can't understand the deeper logic behind those chip accumulations.
Government holdings account for over a quarter. If this really blows up, what will change?
Wait, if liquidity is locked, it means no one will sell next, so is the low point really here?
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metaverse_hermit
· 14h ago
Looking at this data, I can't help but think of the last time I got trapped... Institutions are really different; retail investors like us are still watching K-line charts, while they have already made their moves.
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0xTherapist
· 14h ago
I understand the tactics of institutional coin accumulation, but the ones truly making money are still those who went all in early.
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ConsensusBot
· 15h ago
73% monopolized by a leading company? That's a bit scary; it still feels like a highly concentrated game.
Recently, I came across some interesting data and would like to discuss the underlying market logic with everyone.
According to publicly available information, a total of 368 institutional entities worldwide have accumulated over $185 billion in crypto assets. Among them, a leading digital asset management company alone accounts for 73%, and government holdings also exceed a quarter of the total.
What does this indicate? Institutions have long been deploying real capital, and the scale is no longer small-scale testing.
The on-chain data makes this even clearer. In recent months, large wallet holdings have been steadily increasing, and outflows from exchanges are accelerating—what does this mean? Chips are consolidating, liquidity is being locked, and no one is in a rush to sell off.
Institutional strategies differ from retail investors. They are not concerned with weekly fluctuations but focus on the big picture over the next 3-5 years. When institutional holdings exceed 70%, the market’s bottom support becomes entirely different.
In the short term, policy expectations regarding government holdings may cause some volatility. But from a fundamental long-term perspective, with continuous institutional deployment and gradual locking of chips, the market’s bottom is being steadily reinforced.
This is not speculation; the data is speaking—on-chain signals will give early warnings before any turning point occurs. Monitoring the structure of holdings and capital flows is the correct approach to avoid being disturbed by market noise.