The crypto market saw a surprising move this week with a huge off-exchange deal involving BlackRock’s Bitcoin ETF. A single trade worth over a billion dollars raised eyebrows and led to fresh questions about why big players are pulling back from bitcoin right now.
What Exactly Happened in the Trade
On May 26, nearly 29.21 million shares of the iShares Bitcoin Trust changed hands in one private deal. The shares sold at $43.16 each, which was about $1.01 below the market price at the time. That added up to a total of <$1.26 billion> and cost the seller around $29.5 million in lost value just to get the deal done fast.
The trade went through a special system used for private deals, not the normal stock exchange. This setup let the seller move a massive position without shaking the public market too much.
Why the Seller Chose Speed Over Price
Experts who looked at the numbers say the big discount shows the seller wanted out quickly and was willing to pay for that certainty. In normal times, big investors try to get the best price possible. Here, the focus was clearly on finishing the sale right away.
The size of the position was larger than any single holder listed in recent public filings. That makes it hard to know exactly who sold, but it points to one large investor making a fast decision to cut bitcoin exposure.
Not a Typical Hedge Fund Move
Some people first thought the sale might be part of a common hedge fund trick called a basis trade. In that strategy, traders hold bitcoin while betting against futures contracts at the same time. But the details do not match.
There was almost no extra trading in bitcoin futures on the same day, which would have been expected if many traders were unwinding those positions together. The big discount also would have hurt the returns from such a trade, making the idea unlikely.
Bitcoin ETFs Face Ongoing Pressure
This large sale comes during a tough stretch for U.S. bitcoin ETFs. Money has been leaving these funds every single trading day for more than two weeks. Total assets in the group dropped from over $107 billion to around $94 billion in that short period.
Bitcoin itself is down about 16 percent this year while stocks and other assets keep climbing. Investors appear to be moving money toward areas like artificial intelligence and gold instead of crypto.
What This Means Going Forward
The trade stands out because it happened while bitcoin stayed below the $80,000 level and outflows from ETFs kept happening. It shows that even big holders can decide to exit fast when they feel the need, and they are ready to accept lower prices to do it.
Public records do not yet reveal whether the sale came from client redemptions, risk rules at a firm, or a simple choice to reduce crypto holdings. Either way, it adds to the story of capital leaving the bitcoin space for now.
Traders and long-term holders will be watching closely to see if more large exits appear in the coming weeks or if the market can find fresh support.
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