Bhutan cuts Bitcoin holdings; now ~5.6k–5.7k remain
Based on data from Arkham Intelligence, wallet clusters attributed to the Royal Government of Bhutan have reduced their Bitcoin balance to roughly 5,600–5,700 BTC, down from a peak of 13,295 BTC in October 2025. The figures indicate a methodical drawdown rather than a single-event liquidation.
The same dataset shows renewed on-chain activity in 2026, including a 184 BTC transfer after several months of inactivity and a recent $6.7 million deposit to QCP Capital. Historically, flows linked to the sovereign have appeared in approximately $50 million clips, including a 512.8 BTC transfer to a Binance deposit address in July 2025; movements to custodians or venues can precede distribution but do not in themselves confirm immediate public-market sales.
Why the sell-down and immediate market impact, explained
The near-term market effect of Bhutan’s activity hinges on sizing versus daily BTC liquidity and whether transfers convert into executed sells. On-chain forensic practice treats moves to custodians or OTC partners as potential, not confirmed, supply until settlement is evidenced.
When sales do occur, tranche-based distribution can soften slippage compared with direct market dumps, but the pressure can still add up if buyer demand is weak. Headline sensitivity also matters because traders often front-run perceived sovereign selling.
One recent headline captured that dynamic by pairing sovereign flows with a bearish bank scenario. As reported by CoinGape: “BTC price pressured as the Bhutan government cuts Bitcoin holdings to 5700, while Standard Chartered warned Bitcoin could drop toward $50K.”
Standard Chartered’s $50K downside case and spot ETF flow context
Standard Chartered has outlined a downside case in prior research in which a break below roughly $60k could see Bitcoin gravitate toward the $50k–$52k area, citing softer spot ETF inflows, institutional profit-taking, and reduced support from corporate treasuries. The bank frames this as a risk scenario rather than a structural failure of the asset class.
Under that flow-based framework, persistent spot ETF outflows or muted inflows could leave order books thinner, amplifying the price impact of any large seller, whether a sovereign, fund, or miner. Conversely, stronger ETF demand can absorb sell-side supply and reduce the likelihood of a swift slide toward the bank’s downside area.
This lens helps contextualize Bhutan’s reductions: even measured sovereign distribution can matter if it coincides with weak ETF demand and fragile liquidity. Absent synchronized selling or a deterioration in flows, however, isolated tranches of a few thousand coins would normally be manageable relative to aggregate market depth.
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