Bitcoin Slips on a Single Whale Sale as Ether Neared $5,000
One seller punched a hole in Bitcoin’s weekend, while Ether kept setting new records and stealing the spotlight.
The Weekend Plot Twist: One Seller, Big Splash
If you are hunting for a complex macro narrative behind Bitcoin’s stumble, stand down. The proximate cause was much simpler, and much louder. A single Bitcoin whale offloaded 24,000 BTC on Sunday, a sale worth about $2.7 billion, and that one move kicked off a rapid cascade of liquidations. Bitcoin fell from about $114,666 to $112,546 in nine minutes, with a local bottom near $112,174. The same whale was understood to be rotating billions from BTC into ETH over the week, a tidy bit of opportunism that turned into market theater for everyone else.
How a Sell Button Becomes a Market Event
The 24,000 BTC sale triggered roughly $623 million in liquidations as over-levered longs learned, again, that weekends can be thin and unforgiving. Yet even in the aftermath, Bitcoin clawed back from a weekend low near $110,484 and hovered around $113,000.
JUST IN: A Bitcoin whale sold 24,000 BTC worth over $2.7 billion, causing today’s -$4,000 crash in minutes.
— Bitcoin Archive (@BTC_Archive) August 24, 2025
They still hold 152,874 BTC worth more than $17 BILLION. 😳
h/t @SaniExp pic.twitter.com/m4aM9JwlAO
Translation: Positioning, rather than a mass event.
JUST IN: #Bitcoin flash crash today, which wiped out $310M in long positions, has been traced to a SINGLE Bitcoin whale dumping BTC for ETH.
— Jacob King (@JacobKinge) August 24, 2025
The whale sold 24,000+ BTC, including coins that hadn’t moved in 5+ years, sending 12,000+ #BTC today alone to the Hyperunite trading… pic.twitter.com/h5jEt92Sys
It just goes to show that older wallets and their whales have serious firepower and can distort flows when they move. That context matters, but Sunday’s culprit was not a faceless crowd. It was one whale with a very heavy hand and an appetite for ETH.
Meanwhile, Ether Kept Writing the Headline
While Bitcoin dealt with a whale-induced bruise, Ether kept sprinting. Axios reports ETH broke its 2021 record and peaked at about $4,945.60 on August 24, pushing Ethereum’s market value toward $600 billion. It’s back down to $ 4,723 at the time of writing, but still…
The Ethereum dominance chart is looking insane.
— Ether Wizz (@EtherWizz_) August 24, 2025
Take a look at the last 2 monthly candles, and you'll understand.
The game has changed for $ETH due to institutional bidding and I hope you're not fading this.
I think Ethereum dominance is going above 20% this cycle, along with… pic.twitter.com/fRfMcRLLG3
It might not have made $5,000, but ETH hopped above the $4,900 mark and traded in uncharted territory after smashing its four-year high on Friday. The optics are hard to miss. Bitcoin took a whale punch, Ether posted a personal best and kept pressing higher.
Why ETH Outpaced BTC
Part of the story is rotation. If a single whale can yank billions from BTC into ETH and then lever long on ETH, you do not need a PhD to understand which asset gets the momentum bid. But there is also a cleaner narrative tailwind. Axios points to rising institutional participation and interest around Ethereum’s programmable base layer, plus the growing role of ETFs and treasury buyers. That cocktail creates steady demand, which looks very different from a weekend liquidity pocket.
None of this means Bitcoin is in trouble. This is simply the movement created (initially) by one whale moving his pieces around the board.
What Matters Next
The market learned two things. One, a single motivated seller can still make a mess, especially on a quiet weekend, so risk control is not optional. Two, Ether’s bid is not just vibes. New highs near $5,000 and improving sentiment suggest a different phase for the number two coin, at least for now. If Bitcoin shakes off the whale’s wake, and ETH keeps flirting with five figures, this could turn into the rare stretch where rotation helps the whole complex instead of cannibalizing it.
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