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Whale Buying Hints at Bitcoin Bottom After Worst Month Since 2022 — 3 Signals to Watch
Three signals may determine whether bitcoin’s worst month since 2022 marks a bottom, as tighter central bank policy, inflation pressure, ETF outflows, mechanical selling, and political uncertainty weighed on risk assets while large holders accumulated.
Key Takeaways
Did Whale Buying Mark a Bottom Signal or Just Another False Start?
Bitcoin’s steep June sell-off came as large holders continued buying into the decline, according to a July 7, 2026, report from 21Shares titled “ Bitcoin had its worst month in years. Is it the bottom?” Prices weakened sharply, yet a measure tracking whether large holders were net buyers signaled strong accumulation as bitcoin traded between $60,000 and $64,000.
That accumulation stood out as the share of investors in profit fell below 50%. The analysis compared the setup with two earlier crisis periods: the March 2020 Covid-19 crash and the Q4 2022 FTX collapse. As the firm noted:
The signal does not prove bitcoin has bottomed, but it does show that large holders were buying while weaker market participants faced losses. That distinction shaped the broader argument: June’s decline looked less like a collapse in long-term conviction and more like a combination of macro pressure, forced repositioning, and institutional stress.
What 3 Signals Could Decide Whether the Bottom Holds?
The analysis warned against relying on price alone, stating:
The first is the late-July inflation print. A cooler reading, especially on energy costs, would strengthen the case for Federal Reserve easing later in 2026 and reduce one major headwind for risk assets.
The second is whether bitcoin holds the $59,000-$62,000 zone, where its 200-week moving average aligns with historical buying levels. A weekly close below that range would signal increased downside risk.
The third is the November midterms. The analysis noted that bitcoin has shown an inverse correlation of -0.79 with Democratic sweep odds on Polymarket since mid-2025.
Whale accumulation suggests bitcoin may be near a cycle bottom, but evidence remains incomplete. Inflation, technical support, midterm positioning, and Strategy’s disclosures will determine whether June was a washout or deeper stress. On June 29, Strategy authorized up to $1.25 billion in bitcoin sales to fund its cash reserve and has since reported sales, making future filings key to tracking additional selling.
Why June’s Worst Drop Since 2022 Was Bigger Than Bitcoin
Bitcoin’s decline came during a broader risk-off move after aggressive central bank tightening and an energy shock lifted inflation expectations. Nasdaq lost $1.13 trillion in market value during June, while the S&P 500 shed $560 billion and digital assets lost $380 billion.
The largest crypto also faced selling pressure from U.S. spot bitcoin ETFs, which saw more than $2.5 billion in outflows during June. Much of that was linked to the basis trade, as traders unwound positions between spot ETFs and bitcoin futures. CME data showed leveraged funds cut shorts from roughly 100,000 BTC to 63,000 BTC, or about $2.3 billion, suggesting arbitrage unwinding rather than long-term investors abandoning bitcoin.
The analysis concluded: