While the broader market focuses on daily price fluctuations, one of Ethereum’s most patient OGs has just executed his final act.
After nearly a decade of going through the industry’s most volatile cycles, the legendary whale, known for amassing a staggering 154,076 ETH, has officially emptied his wallet according to data from Lookonchain.
The final 26,000 ETH (approximately $80.88 million) was transferred to Bitstamp, marking the definitive end of a high-stakes journey that began with an average entry price of just $517.
This indicates that the OG did not panic during the brutal stock market crashes of 2018 or 2022. Instead, they held on while their portfolios oscillated by hundreds of millions of dollars.
So this was a multi-year liquidation strategy that resulted in a realized profit of approximately $274 million, a staggering 344% return on capital.
This comes at a time when…
The timing of this release is particularly striking because it coincided with a period of intense institutional standoff.
With Ethereum (ETH) trading around $3,150 at press time, a sudden surge in sell-side liquidity of $81 million could cap prices in the near term.
This pressure is amplified by the recent outflows from the Spot Ethereum ETF of $93.8 million. They suggest that some institutional investors are also pulling out.
However, as the first crypto OGs sell out, a new type of buyer is taking their place.
Companies like BitMine Immersion Technologies now control over 3.43% of Ethereum’s total supply. Unlike individual whales of the past, these institutions are not looking for quick wins.
They are likely to stake their ETH, locking it up to support the network while earning yield.
Therefore, short-term selling pressure exists, but long-term ownership is gradually shifting toward institutions with a much longer time horizon.
Why is this important?
This follows Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin’s desire to change his mindset.
Recently, he called for a return to reality, arguing that the pursuit of ultra-fast transaction speeds was irrelevant.
Instead, Ethereum should focus on bandwidth scaling, the ability to efficiently process large amounts of data.
For Buterin, Ethereum’s long-term strength lies not in shaving milliseconds off transactions, but in handling massive volumes at scale.
Beyond technology, his vision is also philosophical.
He advocates for a “Sovereign Web” that protects users from what he calls “corposlop,” an Internet dominated by addictive algorithms and corporate data mining that erodes user control and autonomy.
Therefore, while the release of the OG could mark the end of an era for a single wallet, Buterin’s vision highlights the true value of Ethereum. It may no longer be measured in dollars, but in the independence it offers to its users.
Final Thoughts
- Short-term selling pressures exist, but they are absorbed without structural damage, an important sign of market maturity.
- ETH ownership is gradually moving from individual legends to institutional balance sheets with longer investment horizons.


