June is becoming a month of sustained whale inflows into Binance.
Since the early-June sell-off began, whale inflows have risen from a 30-day sum near $5B to peaks close to $7B, now sitting around $6.2B. The most relevant pressure is coming from the 1,000–10,000 BTC cohort, which has been the dominant whale group sending BTC to Binance during this decline.
This matters because large exchange inflows are not just a selling signal, but a volatility signal. When whales move size into Binance, the market becomes more exposed to execution risk, liquidity shifts, collateral repositioning, and aggressive spot supply.
The strongest spike of the month came on June 8, when whales sent roughly $171M to Binance in a single inflow event. Historically, this type of whale activity tends to appear around periods where BTC volatility expands in the following days. The signal is not necessarily directional by itself, but it tells us that large holders are becoming more active exactly when price structure is fragile.
Retail inflows remain higher in absolute terms, around $9.06B on a 30-day basis, but the sharper relative increase has come from whales. That suggests this is not a simple retail capitulation event. Large entities are also participating in the pressure beneath price.
For now, BTC remains in a supply-heavy regime. Whale inflows have cooled from the peak, but they remain elevated compared with April and May levels. Until these flows compress meaningfully, any rebound risks being sold into, while another volatility expansion remains on the table.


Written by MorenoDV_
