That Bitcoin volatility we saw between April 15 and 16 was really intense. The price shot up to US$76K on the 15th, the highest level since February, but then when negotiations between the US and Iran went nowhere — and the American vice president confirmed that the disagreements were indeed evident — everything collapsed. Bitcoin dropped to US$72K in a few hours, a intraday decline of over 2%.



What’s most striking about this movement is what on-chain data shows. After touching US$76K, the flow to exchanges surged to 11,000 BTC in one hour — the highest level since December 2025. This is a clear sign of profit-taking pressure. Small investors selling in panic while the big players did the exact opposite.

BlackRock, for example, withdrew 3,446 BTC from Coinbase during this volatility — roughly US$255 million in defensive moves. But here’s where it gets interesting: while Fidelity and ARK recorded outflows, US spot Bitcoin ETFs had a net inflow of US$186 million the day before, with BlackRock’s IBIT leading with US$292 million in inflows.

My analysis has always been based on observing these whale patterns — when you see institutions taking contracyclical positions while the market is in panic, it’s valuable information. The zone between US$76K and US$76,800 is really critical, as analysts highlighted. The fear and greed index dropped to 23, a level of extreme panic indeed.

Now, with Bitcoin oscillating near US$77.5K and the Fed keeping rates unchanged while the S&P 500 and Nasdaq hit record highs, the question is: was this drop just a healthy correction within an uptrend or the beginning of something deeper? Based on how institutions are positioning themselves and on on-chain signals, it seems there’s institutional accumulation happening on dips. The data suggests that those paying attention to whale movements managed to capture opportunities created by the panic.
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