Whale Moves $1.3 Billion ETH to DeFi After Price Hits New All-Time High
3 min readAn anonymous whale just shifted over 629,000 ETH—worth over $1.3 billion at ETH’s current price—to the Compound contract, as picked up by blockchain tracker Whale Alert.
629,000 #ETH (1,321,384,522 USD) transferred from unknown wallet to unknown wallethttps://t.co/wTJWQb5aWU
— Whale Alert (@whale_alert) April 3, 2021
The whale—a term used to denote entities who hold massive amounts of crypto—made the transaction at 07:53 UTC this morning from an unknown wallet.
The recipient wallet is the smart contract for Compound, a decentralized finance (DeFi) protocol that allows traders to earn money on the crypto they save. It’s similar to putting money into an interest-bearing bank account.
But the sender remains a mystery. As the wallet is unlabeled and the ETH blockchain is pseudonymous, it’s difficult to tell who that person (or group of people) is.
Coinciding with the whale move is ETH’s price surge over $2,000; ETH set an all-time-high today of $2,152. To make the transaction happen, the whale paid a gas fee of 0.0205 ETH—just over $43 at ETH’s current price, $2,113.
Gas fees, paid to miners to execute the transactions, are dynamic and operate in an auction-style market. Network congestion and the availability of miners determine the fee quoted at any given time, rather than the value of a transaction.
And $43 to help a whale to move $1.3 billion is a drop in the ocean.
The Compound contract also received 298.7 ETH, or just over $627,000, from another unknown wallet yesterday, and 13,000 ETH (over $27 million) four days ago. Its current balance is 2,389 ETH, which is just above $5 billion.
The sender, the whale, usually trades stablecoins, not ETH. The wallet now lists a balance of 333 ETH, close to $700,000.
ETH Whales
Stablecoins are widely used on DeFi. DeFi, or decentralized finance, is a loosely-connected panoply of non-custodial financial protocols, most of which are built on ETH.
BREAKING: whale buys $1M worth of cryptopunks in 20 minutes
h/t @cyounessi1 for the find https://t.co/67hU02QJ1a
— Spencer Noon (@spencernoon) February 21, 2021
And whales love DeFi protocols. There’s even a tracker to keep tabs on whales making waves across DeFi. UniWhales, launched in September, sends real-time updates on Telegram about big transactions on decentralized exchange Uniswap.
And sometimes the mysterious whales decide to come forward.
When Beeple’s artwork sold to a whale for $69.3 million, the whale later identified himself under the pseudonym “Metakovan”. Crypto journalist Amy Castor later revealed his identity as crypto entrepreneur Vignesh Sundaresan.
Vignesh Sundaresan is the mystery Beeple art buyer. He owns 59% of B20 tokens and the artist owns 2% https://t.co/hZFYyZ5Btu
— Amy Castor (@ahcastor) March 14, 2021
Earlier this year, several ancient BTC whales came out of a decade-long hibernation. On February 24, a hundred BTC that remained dormant since June 2010 moved for the first time—to unknown wallets.
Ancient BTC whales spark curiosity because the owners of old wallets are often presumed to know or be in some ways associated with Satoshi Nakatomo, BTC’s mysterious creator.
In the past, their movements also plunged BTC’s price because the value of the tokens had accrued to huge amounts, and any major selloff shocked the market.