Bitcoin (BTC) faces a new selling threat in the near future as users of defunct exchange Mt. Gox prepare to get their BTC back.
In fresh correspondence dated July 6, attorney Nobuaki Kobayashi, appointed trustee in Mt. Gox rehabilitation process, confirmed that he was "preparing to make repayments" to account holders.
Over eight years after Mt. Gox imploded, it appears that those who lost money are about to receive BTC.
The event has been long coming, as have concerns over its impact on the market. The price of Bitcoin at the time was a fraction of the current $20,900, commentators have noted, leading to suspicions that recipients could instantly sell large amounts of BTC on the market, pressuring prices.
In the official correspondence, Kobayashi did not give an exact date for the repayments to begin.
"The Rehabilitation Trustee is currently preparing to make repayments ('Repayments') in accordance with the approved rehabilitation plan of which confirmation order of the Tokyo District Court (the 'Court') was made final and binding on November 16, 2021 (the 'Rehabilitation Plan')," it reads.
Those owed now have the choice of receiving outstanding funds as an "Early Lump-Sum Repayment or not," it continues, as well as receiving all or part of them in BTC or embattled altcoin Bitcoin Cash (BCH).
"The deadline for the Choice and Registration will be set by the Rehabilitation Trustee with the permission of the Court," the correspondence adds.
The rehabilitation plan was originally approved in 2018 and confirmed in October 2021. Out of the initial 850,000 BTC lost by Mt. Gox's decline, only a reported 150,000 BTC has been recovered.
Potential black swans still to come:1. Mt Gox victims finally get their bitcoin released2. Tether
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