Bitcoin is down 2% on Tuesday as the market decline over the past few days has triggered massive loss realization from new whales.
Following Bitcoin's decline and consolidation below $110,000 over the past few weeks, short-term holders with large balances — also known as new whales — have been under intense pressure.
This cohort has accelerated their selling pressure as prices have failed to sustain above their average cost basis of $110,000, resulting in heavy losses. Between November 4 and 9, new whales booked more than $1.3 billion in losses. This is one of the most aggressive selling streaks of 2025, according to CryptoQuant analyst MorenoDV in a Sunday note.

"Sustained losses of this magnitude suggest forced selling or panic-driven exits, typically driven by leveraged positions being unwound or loss aversion among late entrants," wrote MorenoDV.
This is evident in the 11.3% drop in Bitcoin's open interest (OI) over the past 7 days. While such a decline triggers increased fear, uncertainty and doubt (FUD), it presents a buying opportunity. The purge of excessive and speculative leverage could help lay the foundation for a structural recovery, another CryptoQuant analyst noted in a Tuesday report.
However, "the coming days will reveal whether this was a final shakeout or a prelude to deeper structural stress," MorenoDV added.
For now, Bitcoin's ability to withstand the intense deleveraging and loss realization without prices crashing heavily shows underlying accumulation from strong-conviction whales.
In the past week, "while Dolphins (100–1K BTC) drastically reduced their accumulation from 173.9828K BTC to 81.4535K BTC, Great Whales (>10K BTC) more than doubled their holdings, rising from 26.8767K BTC to 62.8957K BTC (+36.019K BTC)," analyst GugaOnChain wrote in a Sunday CryptoQuant report.
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Bitcoin trades around $103,000, down 2% on Tuesday, as investors eye the $100,000 key level.