Mt. Gox Moves 10,422 Bitcoin While Bitcoin Price Craters Below $69,000
Mt. Gox has moved 10,422 bitcoin worth about $739 million, marking its largest transfer in months as the deadline for creditor repayments approaches in October 2026.
Blockchain data from Arkham Intelligence shows the transfer took place in Bitcoin block 952,072 at 04:47 UTC on June 2. Of the total, 10,306 BTC was sent to a new address with no prior transaction history, while 116 BTC was routed to a known Mt. Gox hot wallet.
A later transaction moved another 116 BTC to a separate address, along with a small test transfer to a Bitstamp cold wallet.
The structure of the transfer mirrors earlier movements tied to administrative preparation for creditor payouts. In past cases, similar wallet activity preceded distributions through partner exchanges such as Kraken and Bitstamp. The newly used address remains unmarked, and the transferred bitcoin has not been sent to any exchange or custody provider.
Mt. Gox was a Tokyo-based bitcoin exchange that launched in 2010 and grew to handle more than 70% of global bitcoin trading at its peak, making it the dominant venue for early BTC markets.
It collapsed in 2014 after losing hundreds of thousands of bitcoin to hacks and operational failures, entered bankruptcy, and has spent the past decade working through a court-supervised process to repay creditors with remaining funds.
Mt. Gox still controls about 34,504 BTC, valued near $2.43 billion at current prices. This remains one of the largest concentrated bitcoin holdings linked to a failed exchange.
Repayment efforts began in mid-2024, with about 19,500 creditors receiving funds so far.
The process has faced repeated delays, with a Tokyo court approving the latest extension in October 2025, pushing the final deadline to October 31, 2026.
Mt. Gox transfers as bitcoin price teeters
The timing of the transfer has drawn attention across the market. Bitcoin fell below $69,000 and touched levels near $68,950 this morning. The decline followed a stretch of sustained outflows from spot bitcoin ETFs and added pressure from recent selling activity tied to large holders.
Creditors who held bitcoin before the exchange collapsed in 2014 acquired their coins at much lower prices. Any distribution creates the possibility of profit-taking, which could increase selling pressure during a period of weaker demand.
On-chain data suggests the transferred funds have not reached exchange order books. Exchange inflow metrics remained stable in the hours following the transaction, indicating no direct selling tied to this movement so far.
Even so, the psychological impact has proven significant. Automated trading systems and leveraged positions reacted to the headline, leading to liquidations that amplified price moves.
This pattern has repeated since distributions began. Large transfers from Mt. Gox wallets have triggered market reactions even when coins did not enter active circulation. In earlier instances, movements were followed by staged payouts through partner exchanges, reinforcing expectations that similar steps could follow.
The destination of the latest transfer remains a key unknown. Analysts note several possibilities, including internal wallet reorganization, preparation for over-the-counter transactions, or staging for future distributions. A transfer to a known exchange wallet would signal a higher likelihood of near-term selling, while movement to new addresses leaves the timeline unclear.
As the October 2026 deadline approaches, each transaction from Mt. Gox draws close scrutiny. With billions in bitcoin still under trustee control, the estate continues to act as a major variable in market structure and sentiment.
This post Mt. Gox Moves 10,422 Bitcoin While Bitcoin Price Craters Below $69,000 first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
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