Key Takeaways:
Galaxy Digital has confirmed the sale of over 80,000 Bitcoin, valued at over $9 billion, on behalf of a mysterious early Bitcoin holder. The transaction marks a rare awakening of dormant BTC from the Satoshi era and demonstrates how far the crypto market has evolved in terms of liquidity, stability, and institutional sophistication.
Let’s dive into the details of this historic crypto moment.
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On July 25, 2025, Galaxy Digital (NASDAQ/TSX: GLXY) announced the completion of one of the largest notional Bitcoin transactions ever recorded. Acting on behalf of a client, the firm facilitated the sale of over 80,000 BTC, linked to a wallet last active in 2011.
According to the company’s press release, this transaction was part of a broader estate planning strategy by the unidentified client, one of the earliest Bitcoin investors in existence.
What’s remarkable isn’t just the size of the deal but that it occurred without sending shockwaves through the market.
Read More: Satoshi-Era Whale Awakens: $1B in Bitcoin Moved to Galaxy Digital After 14 Years

Typically, this type of huge sale, in particular, the wallet is recognized as a whale would cause panic of a collapsed market and lead to a sell-off in the small holders. However, even though over 9 billion dollars were flushed through BTC, the cryptocurrency fell by merely ~1% and traded sideways over the week closing at ~$117274.
This is extraordinary given the historic precedent:
Market observers were quick to note that the liquidity and demand for Bitcoin appear strong enough to absorb even decade-old whale movements.
While Galaxy declined to name the investor, on-chain analysts have pieced together compelling evidence:

It is unknown whether the original wallet author was recovering lost coins, or whether an early miner was cashing out. But the timing, silence and structure of the deal suggest more a very, very quiet, patient, long-term operator making an intended exit plan rather than a market panic.
This isn’t an isolated case. Data from CryptoQuant reveals that whale activity has surged in recent months, with early holders increasingly looking to realize gains, some after a decade of inactivity.
At the same time, demand from new whales including ETFs and institutional custodians, continues to grow.
The Galaxy transaction isn’t the only major BTC supply story.
The UK government reportedly plans to offload over 61,000 BTC, worth roughly $7.18 billion, tied to criminal seizures. Yet even this move isn’t expected to rattle the market significantly.
Why?
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