Bitcoin price just flashed the same warning that preceded its 35% January collapse, slipping below a cluster of critical technical lines on the daily chart.
A single wallet still withdrew 873 BTC worth $66 million from OKX, possibly betting the outcome this time will look nothing like January.
Bitcoin Price Cracks All Four EMAs as a $66 Million Whale Buy Hits
Bitcoin (BTC) is trading at $75,567, now below all four key Exponential Moving Averages (EMAs), trend indicators that smooth recent price action to flag the underlying direction. The 20-day EMA sits at $77,428, the 50-day at $76,677, the 100-day at $76,812, and the 200-day at $81,367.
Around the same time, an on-chain tracker flagged a wallet withdrawing 873.29 BTC worth $66.24 million from OKX early Wednesday. The wallet now holds 881 BTC worth roughly $66.73 million, with prior smaller withdrawals stretching back about a week.
The two signals point in opposite directions. A clean loss of every EMA is one of the most reliable bearish daily signals in 2026, while a fresh $66 million accumulation suggests at least one large operator sees a buy. The historical record explains why both sides have a case.
The Last Three EMA Breaches Show One Crash and Two Bargains
Bitcoin has fully lost all four EMAs three times in 2026. The outcomes split sharply.
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The first event began in late January. Bitcoin closed below every EMA and triggered a 35.02% slide over the following two weeks. It was the deepest single drawdown of the year.
The next two events landed in completely different terrain. On March 26, Bitcoin lost the EMA cluster but the damage stopped at 7.36% before a recovery rally took over. On May 22, an even smaller 3.32% dip preceded a rebound back into the EMA zone.
The pattern shows declining severity, with the last two events behaving like brief consolidations rather than full breakdowns. The catastrophic January event remains the outlier. Whatever made January different from March and May is the only question that matters for this fourth breach.
The on-chain record points directly at the answer.
Long-Term Holder Behavior Explains the January Outlier
Glassnode’s Long-Term Holder Net Position Change, a metric that tracks whether wallets holding Bitcoin for more than 365 days are net accumulating or distributing, reveals a sharp regime shift in early March.
Note: Standard “Hodlers” are the ones holding for 155 days or more.
Through late 2025 and across the January 2026 breakdown, long-term holders were heavy net sellers. The red bars on the chart deepened toward roughly -200,000 BTC at peak distribution, exactly as Bitcoin was sliding. That coordinated long-term holder selling supplied the structural pressure that turned a routine EMA breach into a 35% rout.
Since early March 2026, the picture flipped. Long-term holders have stayed in net accumulation territory for roughly three months, with daily inflows often above 100,000 BTC. That backdrop coincided directly with the muted 7.36% and 3.32% drops in March and May.
The current EMA breach is happening into a long-term holder regime that is still green. The structural seller cohort that powered the January collapse is absent. This is the data point the whale appears to be reading, and it sets the downside math for what follows.
Bitcoin Price Levels Between the 3% Bargain and the January Repeat
Bitcoin price has already shed roughly 2% since losing the EMA cluster. If this breach mirrors the May 22 event, the drop stalls near $73,873, the 0.5 Fibonacci level of the late-March to mid-May rally. That zone aligns with the 3-to-4% magnitude of the May precedent.
If buyers fail to defend $73,873 and the breach scales closer to the March 26 episode, the next checkpoint is $71,773 (0.618 Fibonacci), marking a 6-to-7% total drop from the EMA loss.
The recovery path requires sequential daily closes back above resistance. The first step is reclaiming $75,973 (0.382 Fibonacci) on a daily close. The next is breaking above $78,572 (0.236 Fibonacci), which sits just over the key EMA cluster. A clean move above $82,772 would put Bitcoin price back above every moving average and resume the prior uptrend.
The January risk has not disappeared. If long-term holder net position flips negative on Glassnode during this drop, the comparison to March and May fails, and the path opens toward another deeper dip scenario back toward the mid-$60,000 range.
A daily close above $75,973 separates the 3-to-7% bargain scenario backed by the $66 million whale from a deeper unwind that would invalidate the long-term holder thesis.
The post Bitcoin’s 35% Crash Signal Just Returned But a Whale Bought $66 Million Anyway appeared first on BeInCrypto.
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