Bitcoin dropped from $71,000 to $69,500 on June 2 after the Mt. Gox rehabilitation estate transferred 10,422 BTC, roughly $739 million, out of cold storage into a cluster of fresh, unmarked wallet addresses. Leveraged longs got wiped before a single coin hit an exchange.
KEY DETAILS
The transfer is the estate's first significant on-chain move since late 2024, ending months of silence from one of crypto's most-watched wallet clusters. The destination addresses had no prior transaction history and no verified link to any exchange or known custodian, leaving analysts to guess: internal reorganization, OTC block prep, or pre-distribution staging?
CryptoQuant data showed exchange inflow metrics stayed flat in the hours after the move, meaning the 10,422 BTC had not reached any order book at the time of publication.
MARKET REACTION
Bitcoin shed roughly $1,050 within the hour. Cascading liquidations across leveraged long positions followed. The pattern is familiar - in July 2024, a 44,527 BTC transfer preceded confirmed Kraken distributions. A subsequent 47,229 BTC tranche pushed BTC more than 3% below $57,000 on the day of the move.
WHY IT MATTERS
Mt. Gox creditor repayments continue through 2026. Every large wallet move functions as a psychological trigger - the estate doesn't need to sell to pressure price. It only needs to move.
WHAT TO WATCH
Track whether these addresses interact with exchange deposit wallets. A Kraken or Bitstamp deposit confirms imminent distribution. Continued cold-storage movement is a different story.
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