Bitcoin Whales Accumulate 45,000 BTC As Warsh And Paparo Back Bitcoin’s Role

Bitcoin traded near $76,000 on Tuesday morning as fresh on-chain data revealed that the cryptocurrency’s largest holders have been accumulating at their fastest pace in over a year — a confluence of whale demand and easing geopolitical risk that is reshaping the near-term price picture.

Bitcoin opened near $76,000, up 2.7% from Monday’s lows of $73,854.25. The price action comes on top of a wave of institutional buying that analysts say has tightened available supply. Wallets classified as “whales” — those holding between 100 and 10,000 BTC — added roughly 45,000 BTC last week, the largest single-week accumulation since July 2025, per data from Cex.IO. 

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What distinguishes this round of buying is the coordination: whales purchased in sync rather than in isolation. This is a conviction-driven positioning rather than opportunistic dip-buying. Over the past three months, long-term holders added more than 1 million BTC to cold storage, and exchange reserves have dropped to a multi-year low of approximately 2.21 million BTC.

Institutional players have matched that aggression. Strategy added 34,164 BTC in a single week between April 13 and April 19, paying an average price of $74,395 per coin for a total outlay of roughly $2.54 billion. ETF inflows contributed another layer of demand pressure, with $1.29 billion entering Bitcoin funds in recent sessions. 

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Morgan Stanley has also crossed $100 million in Bitcoin holdings, a milestone that signals growing appetite among traditional Wall Street firms.

Bitcoin acknowledgment from U.S. government officials  

Earlier today, Federal Reserve Chair nominee Kevin Warsh told Congress that digital assets are “already part of the fabric” of U.S. financial services, signaling a view that crypto is now embedded within mainstream financial infrastructure rather than operating on its margins.

Separately, Admiral Samuel Paparo of U.S. Indo-Pacific Command told the Senate Armed Services Committee that Bitcoin is a “valuable computer science tool as power projection,” describing it as a peer-to-peer, zero-trust system with strategic implications. 

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He emphasized its underlying cryptographic architecture and suggested that Bitcoin-related technologies could influence both offensive and defensive cyber capabilities, as well as broader instruments of national power.

Taken together, the remarks reflect growing institutional acceptance of Bitcoin and digital assets across both financial and national security domains. Warsh’s framing highlights normalization within U.S. markets and policy circles, while Paparo’s comments point to the conversation on defense strategy.

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