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Topic: How big is a whale? (Read 2301 times)

legendary
Activity: 3248
Merit: 1179
April 17, 2016, 06:29:27 PM
#42
A Basilosaurus typically grew to a size of 40 to 65 feet (12 to 20 meters) length.



Nice informations, do you think this fish survived cold age and remain hidden until now?
Big whales are players who can invest more then a million dollars in something. With that money you can move the market in direction they wish. Of course some markets are easy to be moved, others can be more stable. But you are big whale if you can affect market even a little with your moves.
I would like to know how many whaless swim in bitcoin waters. And is there one basilosaurus in deep waters?
hero member
Activity: 1470
Merit: 655
April 16, 2016, 12:37:14 PM
#41
this is an interesting question for sure.

i think you can not give an specific number for this thing because the crypto market is not just one or a couple of coins, there are a lot of them. from million dollar bitcoin market to couple of dollars shitcoins.

so you can say a whale is someone who can change the market by putting up walls in orderbook that nobody can pass over then look at each coin and decide how much he will need.
sr. member
Activity: 364
Merit: 250
April 16, 2016, 12:02:37 PM
#40
Well it depend on the coin I think. 10 BTC can be large for a typical alt but for bitcoin it is nothing.
If you over over 20% of the coins you can be considered a whale.
legendary
Activity: 1652
Merit: 1088
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April 16, 2016, 10:35:00 AM
#39
there isn't really a set amount for being a whale since the whale is not an exact explanation. and i think it differs from market to market. but basically you can call anybody who has deep pocket and can control the market price if he whishes.
can be 1000BTC
or can be 10,000,000 [put altcoin name here]

And in relation to the distribution of BTC.
Get it ?
BTC top holders are rare.. people who have a super small amount are common.
So even though a super small BTC holder *may* be able to control a super small ALT market
i don't think that makes him a true whale.. more of a pseudo-whale of sorts LOL



Remember that margin trading is a thing - so someone can borrow large amounts of fiat to set up a buy wall and borrow large amounts of BTc to set up a sell wall - but in reality own a small amount, and are paying interest on the borrowed amounts.
sr. member
Activity: 294
Merit: 250
April 16, 2016, 09:19:05 AM
#38
The size of a whale can be measured by doubling half its size - hope i answered your question Grin

This did not give any useful information. I think a whale has enough power to manipulate the market for a few days.
legendary
Activity: 910
Merit: 1000
April 16, 2016, 08:29:08 AM
#37
The size of a whale can be measured by doubling half its size - hope i answered your question Grin
legendary
Activity: 1904
Merit: 1000
April 08, 2016, 08:26:35 PM
#36
For me, a whale is a person that can influence the price movement with his/her activities. For example, if he/she bought some coins then the coins price will be increasing significanly and when he/she sold the coins the price will be down significanly aswell. I saw some whales couple months ago when some people digging a bunch of clam coins from his btc and doge addies and then sold the clams at the lowest price and suddently the price move down so deep and till now the clam price stay at the lowest price.
sr. member
Activity: 350
Merit: 250
April 08, 2016, 08:02:06 PM
#35
its impossible to measure that.... it depends. The coin, the exchange, the hour.... everything counts.
legendary
Activity: 1862
Merit: 1505
April 08, 2016, 03:24:35 PM
#34
The person carrying amount of bitcoins which can be filled up in the belly of real blue whale... is known as whale of bitcoin. I'd say, 1000 bitcoin is enough for a whale.
legendary
Activity: 994
Merit: 1035
April 08, 2016, 03:24:03 PM
#33
The 800 bitcoin whale is just a small whale. If you look at the price surge or dump, several thousands of bitcoins are involved.

You are not considering the high inflation or the fact that it is really easy to pump up the market cap with a relatively small amount of BTC when almost none of the pre mine and newly mined coins are being sold. It is difficult to quantify how much of this new pump is from new investors as exchanges and day traders manipulate order books for profit so reviewing volume isn't a good indication of new adoption.

The same could be said with BTC market cap... It doesn't take much to drive down BTC's price, but a hell of a lot less to drive down ETH.
sr. member
Activity: 455
Merit: 250
April 08, 2016, 02:58:07 PM
#32
The daily volume of Ethereum is about 20,000 bitcoin. 800 bitcoin is just 4% of daily volume. Can you manipulate the market with so few coins?

Volume doesn't matter as much as Market depth and ether certainly has very shallow market depth. One thing that is confusing many is the false assumption that Ether's inflation is being supported by new investors when this isn't at all true. Ether is still relatively cheap and being mined with GPU's where many miner can afford to hodl their ETH in hopes for a big payday unlike BTC where Miners are forced to sell most their btc to new investors to pay for electricity and asic upgrades. The price of Eth could come crashing down much quicker and I'm sure many of the buy walls will vanish if much less than 800 btc worth of Eth were sold off by a whale.

The 800 bitcoin whale is just a small whale. If you look at the price surge or dump, several thousands of bitcoins are involved.
legendary
Activity: 994
Merit: 1035
April 08, 2016, 02:35:59 PM
#31
The daily volume of Ethereum is about 20,000 bitcoin. 800 bitcoin is just 4% of daily volume. Can you manipulate the market with so few coins?

Volume doesn't matter as much as Market depth and ether certainly has very shallow market depth. One thing that is confusing many is the false assumption that Ether's inflation is being supported by new investors when this isn't at all true. Ether is still relatively cheap and being mined with GPU's where many miner can afford to hodl their ETH in hopes for a big payday unlike BTC where Miners are forced to sell most their btc to new investors to pay for electricity and asic upgrades. The price of Eth could come crashing down much quicker and I'm sure many of the buy walls will vanish if much less than 800 btc worth of Eth were sold off by a whale.
jr. member
Activity: 214
Merit: 1
April 08, 2016, 02:17:07 PM
#30
It obviously depends on which market.
To be a whale in the ETH market you need 600-800BTC.

In other markets you are a whale with 100-200BTC. (Some below, a few higher).

The daily volume of Ethereum is about 20,000 bitcoin. 800 bitcoin is just 4% of daily volume. Can you manipulate the market with so few coins?
member
Activity: 70
Merit: 10
@flozbrand - Follow us on Twitter!
March 27, 2016, 01:35:33 PM
#29
It obviously depends on which market.
To be a whale in the ETH market you need 600-800BTC.

In other markets you are a whale with 100-200BTC. (Some below, a few higher).
hero member
Activity: 560
Merit: 501
March 27, 2016, 09:39:14 AM
#28
I have to say that the troll attempt in this topic finally made me laught Grin
legendary
Activity: 1708
Merit: 1000
Reality is stranger than fiction
March 27, 2016, 09:09:04 AM
#27
For me a whale is anyone whose moves have a big impact on the market.

So the amount of coins varies depending on each market depth.
legendary
Activity: 994
Merit: 1035
March 27, 2016, 12:30:35 AM
#26


So as per definition here people.. does intent matter?

Intent shouldn't matter.... That example is of an individual who at least temporarily could be considered a whale because they moved or manipulated the market to either pump a coin or just buy some coins. The whale swallowed all of the bag holders dumped coins in this example. In such scenarios it is also impossible to definitively determine intent. The imagery of a whale is one that can move or manipulate the surrounding environment around them because their displacement, thus a whale is best defined by the ratio of market liquidity/depth to the whales assets.
legendary
Activity: 1540
Merit: 1011
FUD Philanthropist™
March 26, 2016, 07:28:49 PM
#25
I define a whale as one that has enough assets that they can move/manipulate the market with bear/bull traps. With BTC this means at least 3-5k btc; alts can easily be manipulated with much less.

Well if we're trying to work out the definition then i have another thought..

I have seen a random guy come in that quite likely was a one time buyer.
This user just went to an exchange then bought a HUGE shitload of coins..
Such as Cryptsy + VTC (VertCoin)
All i seen was a bit of buying for a week or two then nothing ever again. (back in early 2014)
And he was throwing orders down for a million dollars then letting people dump into it like crazy.
I dumped all i had into it when he came back one of those times.

So i am asking you all would a one time large coin buyer be consider a Whale?
Me? I am not so sure.

I kept thinking back then too that when i mentioned it on Cryptsy Chat
that some users had chanted "Pump" like he was doing it to pump the coin or setup walls etc.
But he was NOT Pumping the coin at all!
And i had watched the guy carefully for a fair amount of time..
All he was doing is trying to throw down large buy orders then ALLOWING people to dump into it hard.
This person was simply trying to "BUY some coins"

So as per definition here people.. does intent matter?
legendary
Activity: 938
Merit: 1000
March 26, 2016, 04:39:49 PM
#24
there isn't really a set amount for being a whale since the whale is not an exact explanation. and i think it differs from market to market. but basically you can call anybody who has deep pocket and can control the market price if he whishes.
can be 1000BTC
or can be 10,000,000 [put altcoin name here]

And in relation to the distribution of BTC.
Get it ?
BTC top holders are rare.. people who have a super small amount are common.
So even though a super small BTC holder *may* be able to control a super small ALT market
i don't think that makes him a true whale.. more of a pseudo-whale of sorts LOL

I would think we have to attribute some rarity to the term "Whale"
In other words we all can't be whales.
Most of us have at times been able to control an entire market (on a coin nearly dead for example)
It often does not take much at all..
Would most of us be considered Whales then ?
no.

"It's relative" is a good reply but i think the distribution of BTC itself is key too.
Who has how much etc..

EDIT:
I would NOT specify an exact amount / limits etc.

This is the Pseudorca crassidens (false killer whale) that you speak of?  Smiley



This is the guy that plays with 3 BTC on Yobit. Watch out for his presence as he can give you a false sense of market liquidity in a sea of shitcoin.
member
Activity: 94
Merit: 10
I <3 Zennies
March 26, 2016, 04:01:11 PM
#23
I define a whale as one that has enough assets that they can move/manipulate the market with bear/bull traps. With BTC this means at least 3-5k btc; alts can easily be manipulated with much less.

Well said... You can be a whale for one coin if you have the ability to move it like this or if you are to be called a whale for all of crypto you need to be able to do this for bitcoin and any of the others.
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