Jan 20, 2026 2 min read 0 views

Major Crypto Holders Increase Stakes in Ethereum Chainlink and Bitcoin Amid Retail Selling

Large cryptocurrency holders are accumulating Ethereum, Chainlink, and Bitcoin, with Ethereum's staking ratio hitting 30% and significant institutional inflows noted, despite recent price declines.

Major Crypto Holders Increase Stakes in Ethereum Chainlink and Bitcoin Amid Retail Selling

On-chain data shows major cryptocurrency holders are increasing their positions in Ethereum, Chainlink, and Bitcoin, a move that contrasts with recent selling pressure from retail traders.

Ethereum's staking ratio reached 30% on Monday, locking over $120 billion worth of ETH on the network, according to Token Terminal.

On Tuesday, crypto mining firm Bitmine Immersion staked an additional 86,848 ETH, worth $279.4 million, bringing its total staked to 1.77 million ETH valued at $5.65 billion, Arkham Intelligence reported.

A separate, newly created wallet withdrew $10 million in Ethereum from an exchange.

"Institutions primarily lock funds to reduce available liquidity on exchanges, effectively altering the supply-demand balance, which can amplify the market impact of any subsequent demand," Jimmy Xue, Co-Founder and COO of quantitative yield protocol Axis, told Decrypt.

Acquiring a significant stake also allows these entities to participate in network governance, securing influence over future protocol upgrades, Xue added.

The top 100 Chainlink whales have accumulated 16.1 million LINK since mid-November 2025, a period during which the asset's price has hovered around $13.

"As retail sells off due to impatience & FUD, it's common to see smart money gather up more LINK to prepare for (or cause) the next pump," market intelligence platform Santiment noted in a Tuesday tweet.

Spot market average order sizes have been dominated by whale activity since mid-December, while retail traders maintain dominance in the futures market, according to on-chain analytics platform CryptoQuant.

Xue noted that such a divergence often signals a transfer of assets from short-term traders to long-term holders, which can indicate a floor in selling pressure. "However, this pattern is not a guaranteed predictor of a trend reversal, as it can also reflect inventory management by market makers," he added.

Bitcoin is also noting a significant uptick in institutional demand, CryptoQuant CEO Ki Young Ju tweeted on Tuesday.

"577,000 Bitcoin, worth $53B, added over the past year, and still flowing in," he added, referencing growth in U.S. custody wallets typically holding between 100 and 1,000 BTC each.

Despite this underlying accumulation, prices have faced headwinds due to Monday's sell-off. Ethereum is down 3.3% over 24 hours, trading just below $3,100, according to CoinGecko data.

Prediction market users on Myriad, owned by Decrypt's parent company Dastan, now assign a 55% chance to Ethereum dropping to $2,500 rather than rallying to $4,000, having flipped bearish on Tuesday.

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