Mt. Gox, the defunct crypto exchange whose 2014 collapse left creditors waiting more than a decade for repayment, moved more than $739 million in Bitcoin on Tuesday as the asset fell below $70,000.
The defunct exchange moved 10,422.65 BTC from cold storage, with most of the funds sent to a new wallet and 116.30 BTC routed to a known Mt. Gox hot wallet, according to Arkham data showing the transfers early Tuesday.
It’s worth noting the transactions do not indicate that Mt. Gox sold Bitcoin or began a new round of creditor repayments. The estate’s trustee has until Oct. 31, 2026 to complete repayments after extending the deadline last year, citing incomplete creditor procedures and processing delays.
Mt. Gox was once the world’s largest Bitcoin exchange before its 2014 collapse, when roughly 850,000 BTC went missing and creditors were pushed into years of bankruptcy and rehabilitation proceedings.
A Tokyo court approved its civil rehabilitation plan in 2021, clearing the way for partial repayments through registered exchanges, though the process has faced repeated deadline extensions and delays.
Bitcoin began its latest slide around the time of the transfer, falling below $70,000 as broader market pressure weighed on crypto assets, amid continued ETF outflows, geopolitical tension, and wider risk-off sentiment, pushing the alpha cryptocurrency to a two-month low.
A known ‘overhang’
Past Mt. Gox wallet movements have often drawn trader attention because they can precede repayment steps, though the transfers themselves do not show that coins were sold or directly caused Bitcoin’s price drop.
Mt. Gox still has about 35,000 BTC left to distribute, worth roughly $2.4 billion, according to Markus Levin, co-founder of decentralized data network XYO. While substantial in absolute terms, Levin told Decrypt the amount is "small relative to the liquidity and trading volumes in today's Bitcoin market."
"Unless those coins get sold aggressively over a short window, I don't expect the remaining distributions to move the price much," Levin said.
The market is more sensitive to ETF flows, macro conditions, and institutional positioning than the remaining Mt. Gox supply, which traders have had years to price in, Levin explained.
"At this point it's more of a recurring headline than a real source of downside pressure," he added.
The transfer appears linked to the trustee’s repayment process rather than "a sign of immediate selling," Ignacio Aguirre, chief marketing officer at Bitget, told Decrypt.
Mt. Gox has been “a known market overhang for years,” while earlier creditor distributions have not seriously disrupted Bitcoin trading, Aguirre said. Remaining repayments could still matter, but their effect should be weighed against deeper market liquidity, ETF flows, and macro pressure, he added.
Aguirre points to sentiment around wallet activity as the more immediate risk, saying large on-chain transfers could still “trigger market speculation” before it’s clear whether coins are being distributed or sold, even while Bitcoin markets have achieved “stronger liquidity and institutional participation” compared to the earlier phases of the Mt. Gox repayment process.
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