Bitcoin whales realized losses just hit a staggering $30.9 billion in 2026 so far. According to Glassnode data, traders holding 100 to 10,000 BTC locked in an average of $337 million in losses per day during Q1. That’s the worst quarter since the 2022 bear market.
If history repeats, we could be in for a deeper drop.
Bitcoin Whales Realized Losses Mirror 2022’s Bloodbath
Let’s break down the numbers. Sharks (100–1,000 BTC) realized roughly $188.5 million in daily losses. Whales (1,000–10,000 BTC) added another $147.5 million per day. Combined, that’s over $30 billion in realized losses already.
The only quarter worse? Q2 2022. Back then, daily realized losses averaged $396 million. And we all remember what followed: BTC dropped over 50%, then another 20% by year-end. The Terra collapse, Celsius freeze, and Three Arrows Capital implosion triggered total panic.
Now in 2026, the triggers are different but just as nasty: Iran war-driven inflation fears, quantum computing security risks, and broader stress in the AI-led risk trade. Whales are cutting losses now because they expect even lower prices.
Long-Term Holders Are Capitulating Too
It’s not just whales. Long-term holders (coins held over 6 months) are also selling at a loss. Glassnode’s LTH Realized Loss chart shows about $200 million per day in losses since November 2025.

What would signal a bottom? Glassnode says a cooldown below $25 million per day. Until then, selling pressure remains elevated. Some analysts now point to $40,000–$50,000 as a possible bottom range.
My Thoughts
This is the kind of data that keeps me up at night. When whales and sharks take losses at 2022 levels, it signals genuine fear, not just retail panic. The macro environment is hostile: oil above $111, war escalation, and now quantum FUD. Long-term holders throwing in the towel is the final stage of capitulation. The good news? Capitulation often precedes a bottom. The bad news? We’re not there yet. Watch for daily realized losses to drop below $25M. That’s the first real sign of exhaustion. Until then, cash is king, and bottoms are guesses.