Bitcoin tumbled almost 4% in minutes on 24 August, briefly touching an intraday low of $110,671 before recovering above $112,000. Blockchain-analysis firms tracking the address activity said the move coincided with a transfer of more than 24,000 BTC—valued at roughly $2.7 billion—to the crypto-derivatives venue Hyperunite/Hyperliquid. The sudden sale erased about $3 billion in aggregated open interest across Bitcoin and Ethereum contracts and triggered a wave of forced liquidations. On-chain data show between $294 million and $310 million of Bitcoin long positions were wiped out in roughly an hour, part of a broader 24-hour tally that saw 130,441 traders liquidated for $543.57 million across all digital-asset markets. Despite the disposal, wallets linked to the entity still control 152,874 BTC. Blockchain records also indicate that two long-standing Bitcoin holders—believed to include the seller—redeployed proceeds into Ethereum, staking a combined 275,500 ETH worth about $1.3 billion. The episode underscores how a single large holder can jolt crypto markets even as liquidity and derivatives participation deepen.
JUST IN: A Bitcoin whale sold 24,000 BTC worth over $2.7 billion, causing today’s -$4,000 crash in minutes. They still hold 152,874 BTC worth more than $17 BILLION. 😳 h/t @SaniExp https://t.co/m4aM9JwlAO
Did someone really just dump 24,000 Bitcoin? https://t.co/azGPAd3bHk
JUST IN: A single whale caused today’s $310M Bitcoin flash crash by dumping 24,000+ BTC. The entity still holds 152,874 BTC across linked wallets. The funds trace back to HTX deposits from six years ago. Via @SaniExp https://t.co/4xrZiiVpJ6