Two mysterious Bitcoin wallets holding a combined 1,000 Bitcoin — worth $61 million at current prices — have suddenly awoken after a 10-year hiatus, transferring out almost every single satoshi.
Wallet address “16vRq…qjzEa”
transferred
out its 500 Bitcoin (
BTC
) at block 843,131 on May 12 at 7:10 pm UTC, while the other 500 Bitcoin was
sent
by address “1DUJuH…NgfC5” two blocks later, according to Blockchain.com’s Bitcoin block explorer.
The wallets each received 500 Bitcoin on Sept. 12 and Sept. 13, 2013, when Bitcoin was priced at $134,
according
to CoinGecko.
At current prices, the combined amount transferred is now worth 456 times more than their acquisition price, at $61.2 million.
Since the transfers, one of the receiving addresses from “16vRq…qjzEa” has already transferred the 500 Bitcoin onward to a multitude of wallets, while the receiver from “1DUJuH…NgfC5” is still holding its 500 Bitcoin.
The proximity of the inward and outward transfers
prompted
blockchain analytics firm Lookonchain to pair the two transactions together, onlookers believe the two wallets were owned by the same person or entity.
Source:
Lookonchain
Before the transfers, the two addresses were the equal 4,353rd-largest Bitcoin whales,
according
to BitInfoCharts.
Less than a week ago, a
Satoshi Nakamoto-era Bitcoin wallet
transferred 687 Bitcoin, worth $43.9 million, to two separate addresses.
Related:
‘Epic sat’ mined from fourth Bitcoin halving block sells for $2.1M
While at least one of these early-day Bitcoin wallets tends to wake up each month, nearly 1.8 million Bitcoin
addresses have remained dormant
for over a decade,
according
to a recent analysis by Chainalysis and Fortune.
These wallets, excluding Nakamoto’s wallet, contain about $121 billion worth of Bitcoin, Fortune said.
While it is impossible to know how much this has been lost, the 1.8 million addresses account for 8.5% of the total 21 million Bitcoin that will ever exist.
People often speculate that dormant wallets may be waking up to sell Bitcoin at an opportune time, others suggest it could be to transfer the funds to a different address, perhaps under a more secure noncustodial wallet service provider.
Bitcoin is currently priced at $61,450 and is up 130% over the last 12 months, according to CoinGecko.
Bitcoin’s change in price since April, 2013. Source: CoinGecko
Big Questions:
How can Bitcoin payments stage a comeback?
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