Bitcoin (BTC) hodlers are asking questions after 10,000 BTC dormant since 2013 suddenly left its wallet.
On-chain data flagged on Aug. 28-29 confirmed a large tranche of bitcoins had become liquid again after nearly a decade.
Analysts first began to notice curiously high transaction volumes this weekend as 5,000 BTC was included in a block.
Having stayed in the same wallet since 2013, the funds, the owner of which remains unknown, were soon joined by a near identical 5,000 BTC a day later.
In total, 10,000 BTC moved for the first time since 2013, and on-chain sleuths are curious as to the motive of the whale in charge.
Analysis of the destination wallets has concluded that the funds were not sent to an exchange for sale. Instead, they were split among a large number of new wallets.
Considering the reasoning behind the move, Maartunn, a contributor to on-chain analytics platform CryptoQuant, suggested that privacy may play a part.
Quick investigation of @IT_Tech_PL 1. Bitcoin moved to new address2. From new address to multiple addresses of small amountsBasically the scenario as @ki_young_ju described herehttps://t.co/FHgIJsv24P
Maartunn linked to comments from CryptoQuant CEO, Ki Young Ju, who last week argued that those in ownership of "older" coins, especially in large amounts, likely needed to avoid drawing attention to their now greatly-increased wealth. In 2013, BTC/USD traded at a maximum of around $1,165.
For Ki, these coins were “minted in the lawless era.”
"We uncovered that these whales were highly likely: a) early visionaries that accumulated bitcoin via mining and trading, and b) coins coming from the Cryptsy bitcoin exchange just before it was 'hacked' (allegedly stolen customer funds)," a CryptoQuant research piece
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