In a dramatic turn in the cryptocurrency market, Bitcoin (BTC)
$91,967 experienced significant losses with 80 billion dollars in BTC sales over 30 days. The reasons behind these sales remain speculative, but Nick Szabo’s recent warnings appear linked to these events.
Massive Bitcoin Sales
Renowned within the Turkish crypto community, Tansel Kaya delves into the motivations behind 815,000 BTC sales within a month, echoing Szabo’s analysis. BlackRock’s acquisition of Bitcoin raises concerns but does not equate to dominating the supply. Most of BlackRock’s BTC holdings are custodied for clients, rather than owned by the company itself, highlighting the importance of understanding asset company logics.
Nick Szabo, instrumental in Bitcoin’s conceptual foundation with his Bit Gold article in 2005, is speculated by many, including Kaya, to be Satoshi or a key team member. Szabo recently broke years of silence to vocalize his perspectives amidst escalating issues in Gaza, with insights relevant to the current BTC selling spree.
Szabo questions the extended data storage capabilities influencing legal vulnerabilities for Bitcoin. The introduction of changes in Bitcoin Core v30 software, expanding the OP_RETURN field within blocks, has sparked significant discourse. This field, initialized in 2014, permits direct data writing to the blockchain for timestamps and zero-knowledge proofs.
In April, Peter Todd proposed expanding this feature, leveraging up to the maximum block size of 4MB. Before widespread consensus, Bitcoin Core developer and UC Berkeley alumna Gloria Zhao finalized this feature’s inclusion, stirring debates and sparking a divisive atmosphere.
Unlike consensus rule changes like Taproot, nodes can opt-out of these rules. Protesters increasingly utilize alternative Bitcoin clients, like Bitcoin Knots, showcasing resistance similar to the 2017 block size conflicts. However, Knots usage waned during the whale sales period, with only a 5% adoption rate noted by Kaya.
BlackRock and Its Bitcoin Strategy
As the world’s leading asset manager, BlackRock accumulates BTC through ETFs and propels mining companies toward public listings, controlling significant market segments and possibly influencing BTC integrity. Kaya argues that BlackRock’s maneuvers may eventually cripple Bitcoin, despite its investor-driven ambitions.
BTC’s early investors may be offloading due to BlackRock’s involvement, reflecting discomfort with BlackRock’s overarching influence. While Knots adoption rates rise in contention with Core, dependency on Coinbase for Bitcoin ETF custody services ties BlackRock’s activities to additional stakeholders, potentially centralizing control within major entities.
Historical precedents, like Epstein’s influences via MIT, suggest persistent overt and covert attempts to shape Bitcoin. Szabo and other analysts continue questioning the evolving framework, determining future outcomes with impending scrutiny.



