The Shiba Inu, which bought 6 trillion SHIB on Thursday, bought another 276 billion earlier today in a few hours.
The International Business Times reported that a whale first bought 6 trillion SHIB tokens on Thursday and added 276 billion Shiba Inu today. Other whales are also showing great interest in this meme as well.
The whale catches amazing amounts of SHIB
According to the article, after buying a staggering 6 trillion chips on Thursday for $4,383,916, an anonymous crypto whale closed another deal earlier today, buying three more blocks of Dogecoin’s rival meme: 116 billion, 159 billion, and finally, another billion chips.
The person performed the three transactions with only a few hours between each of them on a Saturday. SHIB purchased today totaled 276 billion, adding to the 6 trillion SHIB purchased Thursday by the same person.
🐳🐳 Bought a whale from SHIB 6,178,758,122,373 gray dollars (43838,916 USD)
Transaction: https://t.co/X7mlV2fmKj#SHIB #ShibArmy #sheba #shiparmi
– WhaleStats.eth – Track the best 1K ETH wallets (WhaleStats) September 30, 2021
The article’s authors believe Thursday’s purchase pushed SHIB more than 7 percent and gave the currency a boost of 4.39 percent after today’s purchases as well.
However, the whale’s address – 0x7e1aa2e386f02b398da7aad05447c4749d1317c1 – carries zero SHIB, according to Whale Now.
At the time of writing, the cryptocurrency meme is sitting at 0.00000777.
The whales are very interested in the Shiba Inu
Crypto whales’ interest in rival Dogecoin grew, and they got their hands on huge SHIB sums earlier this year — in late June, when the coin was added through the eToro platform.
During the last week of July, whales added another big position in SHIB, when the coin was listed by Coinbase Pro and WeBull. When the coin was added by Binance and Coinbase in September and August, more SHIB went to cold whale wallets.
The community expects Robin Hood to list SHIB
Now, the SHIB community expects Robinhood to list this cryptocurrency as well, and some SHIB fans are posting daily requests to list Shiba Inu. Besides, a petition on Change.org to submit the list was signed by nearly 200,000 people.