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 at scale, steadfastly vacuuming up coins every chance they get.
Strategy stacked another 130 Bitcoin (BTC) on Dec. 1, while the insatiable Tom Lee scooped up $150 million of Ether (ETH) on Dec. 4, prompting Arkham to post, “Tom Lee is DCAing ETH.”
But while it may look like the smart money is glued to the screen reacting to every market downturn, the reality is quite different.
Institutions don’t use the retail vocabulary, Samar explains, but the underlying ideas of disciplined accumulation, opportunistic rebalancing and staying insulated from short-term noise are very much present in how they engage with assets like Bitcoin.
The core difference, he points out, is in how they execute those ideas. While retail investors are prone to react to headlines and price charts, institutional desks rely on “structured, rules-based and quant systematic frameworks.”
Asset managers or hedge funds use a combination of macroeconomic indicators, momentum triggers, and technical signals to express a long-term view and “identify attractive entry levels.” He says:
And while retail DCA suggests buying the same dollar amount on a fixed schedule, institutions approach the same gradual exposure with “execution science.” Periodic market orders are replaced by algorithmic strategies to minimize market impact and avoid signaling intent.
In each case, their strategies are always shaped by mandates around risk, liquidity, expectation of market impact, and portfolio construction (rather than posting memes of scooping up digs or trading on momentum).
Related: The most common crypto metrics: A beginner’s guide
What really happens when Bitcoin drops 10–20%?
Despite it looking like they’re reacting to the market in real-time, the reality is far more measured. Samar explains that quant-driven funds rely on statistical models that can discern when a sharp price move indicates a “temporary dislocation” rather than a real reversal.
So while retail traders may react to calls to buy the dip, institutional responses to market slumps are structured, driven by signals, and “governed by pre-defined processes.”
According to Samar, the most important thing is to define your exposure upfront, before the markets hit the skids. He points out that institutions don’t wait for volatility to decide what they want to own. They have to define their target allocations and the cost bases they’re aiming for before the market moves to prevent them from reacting emotionally to headlines.
The second principle, Samar says, is to separate the investment decision from the execution decision. “A portfolio manager may determine it’s time to build exposure, but the actual trading is handled systematically – via execution strategies that spread orders over time, seek liquidity across venues and aim to keep market impact low.”
Even at the retail level, the idea is the same: decide what you want to own first, then think carefully about how to get there.
Finally, analyze your moves post-trade. Institutions ask whether the execution matched the plan, where slippage occurred, and what can be improved next time. So if you want to stack sats like a pro:
This article does not contain investment advice or recommendations. Every investment and trading move involves risk, and readers should conduct their own research when making a decision.
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