#数字资产市场动态 BlackRock's recent Bitcoin purchasing strategy is worth paying attention to. This is not an aggressive autonomous investment, but rather large-scale positioning of digital assets on behalf of institutional clients—pension funds, asset management firms, and others.
Data speaks: they increased holdings by 6,647 BTC in a single day, bringing the total holdings to 781,000 BTC, which is nearly 4% of Bitcoin's circulating supply. What does this proportion mean? The actual tradable Bitcoin in the market is decreasing, and liquidity is gradually being locked up.
It's not just Bitcoin being absorbed. The story of Ethereum is even more interesting—tens of thousands of ETH are being continuously accumulated or staked, and the actual supply on exchanges is tightening. Here’s an interesting cycle: ETF accumulation + staking lock-up, reducing supply, decreasing selling pressure, and shifting the market logic from "short-term price speculation" to "long-term value accumulation."
Looking at short-term K-line charts, there hasn't been a surge, but the continuous inflow of funds is another signal. IBIT and ETHA respectively absorbed $648 million and $81.6 million. This steady institutional capital input is quietly changing the underlying structure of the market.
By 2026, the core issue in the crypto market may no longer be "Will institutional investors enter," but rather "Is there enough liquidity?" This shift itself explains everything.
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
12 Likes
Reward
12
5
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
PhantomHunter
· 9h ago
BlackRock's move is really like playing chess, not hype. 780,000 BTC locked up, liquidity is truly disappearing. By 2026, people will probably be rushing to buy.
View OriginalReply0
ConsensusBot
· 9h ago
781,000 BTC locked, this is a signal before the liquidity crisis. What's next to drive the price down?
View OriginalReply0
CryptoComedian
· 9h ago
Smiling and then crying, BlackRock is playing "quietly buying, buying, buying," and by the time we realize it, liquidity has been locked up.
This institutional move is brilliant, large-scale absorption pretending nothing's wrong, while we're still struggling with the K-line.
4% of the circulating supply, brother, this is quietly changing the game rules.
Reduced supply and decreased selling pressure, sounds great, right? But it cracks me up—this is a sign of being cut.
The 2026 problem has shifted from "whether to enter the market" to "whether there's enough liquidity," trapping retail investors in a cage.
It's truly funds quietly changing the underlying, while we're still dreaming over K-line charts.
View OriginalReply0
MysteryBoxOpener
· 9h ago
Oh wow, the logic of liquidity locking is becoming clearer and clearer. Blackstone is really playing a big game.
View OriginalReply0
FreeRider
· 9h ago
Wow, BlackRock's move is really quietly locking in liquidity. 780,000 BTC accounts for 4%, and this number looks outrageous.
#数字资产市场动态 BlackRock's recent Bitcoin purchasing strategy is worth paying attention to. This is not an aggressive autonomous investment, but rather large-scale positioning of digital assets on behalf of institutional clients—pension funds, asset management firms, and others.
Data speaks: they increased holdings by 6,647 BTC in a single day, bringing the total holdings to 781,000 BTC, which is nearly 4% of Bitcoin's circulating supply. What does this proportion mean? The actual tradable Bitcoin in the market is decreasing, and liquidity is gradually being locked up.
It's not just Bitcoin being absorbed. The story of Ethereum is even more interesting—tens of thousands of ETH are being continuously accumulated or staked, and the actual supply on exchanges is tightening. Here’s an interesting cycle: ETF accumulation + staking lock-up, reducing supply, decreasing selling pressure, and shifting the market logic from "short-term price speculation" to "long-term value accumulation."
Looking at short-term K-line charts, there hasn't been a surge, but the continuous inflow of funds is another signal. IBIT and ETHA respectively absorbed $648 million and $81.6 million. This steady institutional capital input is quietly changing the underlying structure of the market.
By 2026, the core issue in the crypto market may no longer be "Will institutional investors enter," but rather "Is there enough liquidity?" This shift itself explains everything.