Whale Buys 28 Billion SHIB for $1.2 Million as Price Stalls

SHIB

Yesterday, the whale ETH pseudonym “Gimli” bought 28 billion SHIB for $ 1.2 million. Gimli has accumulated for months the infamous memecoin, which is now the 13th largest crypto by market cap.

Stacking SHIB

WhaleStats – a Twitter account analyzing the movements of the richest 1000 ETH wallets – called attention to the transaction yesterday. Apparently, Binance sent exactly 28,236,296,316 SHIB to Gimli for $1,204,823.

With the latest purchase, Gimli now holds a massive SHIB 1,281,667,671,716.74 for $ 53,977,897. This is more than what Binance holds on its exchange: 531,107,299,855.75 SHIB valued at $ 22,367,776.

Buyers should be wary on that front. Though SHIB is a crypto token, it is far from decentralized. According to data from Coincarp, the top 20 SHIB addresses alone control 70% of token supply.

WhaleStats ranks Gimli as the 246th largest ETH address. Its address is 25% SHIB, which is even higher than its ETH balance. The Whale has been making large and regular purchases of the token since June and has gained notoriety for it.

Shiba Inu’s Rise

SHIB is a spinoff memecoin known as the “Dogecoin killer.” Though Dogecoin was originally created as a joke, it has cemented itself as a top 20 cryptocurrency. Shiba Inu is now amongst its ranks, with a near $23 billion market cap. It even briefly surpassed its parent dog-coin after surging back in October.

As you might expect, both DOGE and SHIB are highly speculative, even among other cryptocurrencies. They are heavily impacted by short-term market sentiment, especially when influenced by Dogecoin enthusiast Elon Musk.

For example, Dogecoin copycats soared when the Tesla CEO revealed his new pet dog – a Shiba Inu. On the other hand, SHIB tanked after Musk announced that he didn’t personally own the meme coin.

This week, SHIB has seen relatively moderate price development. However, he managed to get listed on Kraken at the end of last month.

admin

Read Previous

British Security Think Tank’s Report Warns NFTs Could Bolster Money Laundering Schemes

Read Next

Ethereum’s high gas fee ‘preventing more retail traders from using DEXs’ – Report

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Right Menu Icon