SAN FRANCISCO — As free-agent bombshells dropped every few minutes and high-impact trades lit up the social media timeline on the first day of NBA free agency, the Warriors are yet to participate in the team-building bonanza.

In the first 24 hours since teams were able to officially negotiate with free agents starting at 3 p.m. on Monday, Golden State’s only move was not re-signing longtime big man Kevon Looney, an unrestricted free agent who reportedly agreed with New Orleans on a 2-year, $16 million deal.

Golden State is in a holding pattern. Restricted free agent Jonathan Kuminga is expecting offers in the range of $25 million per year from other teams, and the Warriors can either match, facilitate a sign-and-trade, or let him walk.

The Warriors have $139 million tied up in the Big 3 of Steph Curry, Jimmy Butler and Draymond Green, and will have limited cap space to work with if they want to avoid overspending penalties.

Golden State has been linked to stretch big Al Horford by multiple media outlets, but is yet to make a move. While the Warriors have been stuck in neutral, it has been full speed ahead for many of the top teams in the Western Conference.

Houston has spent the last few weeks revamping its team after being eliminated in the first round of the playoffs by the Warriors in seven games.

The Rockets traded for former Warrior Kevin Durant while dumping NorCal native Jalen Green and Golden State nemesis Dillon Brooks. They also signed forward Dorian Finney-Smith, brought back Clint Capela, and handed Jabari Smith Jr. a $121 million extension.

They also agreed to a $50 million contract with point guard Fred VanVleet, and agreed to a deal with center Steven Adams.

The Rockets have been the most active franchise thus far, but they are far from alone.

Minnesota re-upped its power forward rotation of Julius Randle and Naz Reid to contracts totaling $225 million, after knocking the Warriors out of the second round and subsequently losing to Oklahoma City in the conference finals.

LeBron James activated his $52 million player option, setting up a full season alongside Luka Doncic. But James’ agent, Rich Paul, released a cryptic statement that sparked rumors James was seeking to force his way out despite accepting the cash.

Across town, the Clippers will add stretch big Brook Lopez, agreed to a new two-year deal with future Hall of Famer James Harden and resigned Nic Batum for $11.5 million over two seasons.

The reigning champion Thunder are reported to have agreed with MVP Shai Gilgeous-Alexander on a $285 million supermax extension, and have brought back reserves Jaylin Williams and Ajay Mitchell for a combined $32 million.

In the Rocky Mountains, Denver agreed to swap unapologetic gunner Michael Porter Jr. for a more well-rounded forward in Cam Johnson, brought back defensive stopper Bruce Brown on the veteran minimum and traded Dario Saric for veteran center Jonas Valanciunas.

Aside from the Rockets, the other two Texas teams are expected to be factors this season. The Mavericks re-signed Kyrie Irving for $119 million over three seasons and agreed to a deal with D’Angelo Russell for $13 million over two years.

The Mavs also re-signed Daniel Gafford to a three-year contract, and he will play next to Anthony Davis and No. 1 overall pick Cooper Flagg.

San Antonio bolstered its Victor Wembanyama-led frontcourt by offering center Luke Kornet a four-year, $41 million free-agent contract, and guard De’Aaron Fox is expected to be fully healthy at the start of next season when the Spurs debut No. 2 overall pick Dylan Harper.

It is clear that as the Warriors stand pat, the rest of the conference has gotten better.