The defunct Mt Gox exchange transferred roughly 10,608 BTC, worth about $953 million, to a new wallet, its first large-scale bitcoin movement in eight months and a shift that revived concerns over creditor repayments.Key TakeawaysMt Gox moved about 10,608 BTC ($953 million) in early June, its first large transfer in eight months.The estate still holds roughly 34,689 BTC ($3.14 billion), with repayments delayed to October 2026.The receiving wallet has not sent coins to exchanges, easing fears of imminent selling. The First Big Move in Many Months A Mt Gox-labeled cold wallet moved about 10,608 BTC, valued at roughly $953 million, into a newly created address, marking the estate’s first large-scale transfer in eight months. Onchain analytics accounts, including Lookonchain, flagged the transfers as they happened, and the activity quickly drew attention across crypto markets. Mt. Gox’s latest BTC movement, per Arkham Mt Gox, once the largest bitcoin exchange in the world, collapsed in 2014 after losing hundreds of thousands of coins to a long-running hack. The estate has spent the past decade working through Japanese civil rehabilitation proceedings, gradually consolidating and moving the bitcoin it recovered as it prepares to repay former users. Large transfers from the estate are scrutinized because of their scale, as wallets associated with Mt Gox still hold enough bitcoin to move markets if the coins were sold quickly, so any movement tends to spark speculation that distributions, or sales, may be near. In this case, the signals were more measured, given that the receiving wallet has so far only held the bitcoin it received and has not forwarded any coins to centralized exchanges (a step that would more strongly suggest an imminent sale). Past Mt Gox transfers have similarly moved coins between estate-controlled wallets rather than to trading venues. Repayments Due in October The timing matters because the estate pushed its creditor repayment deadline back again, to October 2026. The trustee has extended the deadline multiple times, citing the complexity of verifying claims and distributing assets to creditors scattered across the globe. After the latest move, Mt Gox still holds roughly 34,504 BTC, worth about $3 billion at current prices. Those holdings represent one of the largest known concentrations of bitcoin outside of exchanges and government wallets, which is why each transfer is parsed so closely. Bitcoin.com News has previously reported that markets have held steady during Mt Gox transfers, even though creditors who have waited years for repayment are not uniformly expected to sell on receipt. Former chief executive Mark Karpelès has also said there is no imminent sale planned, framing the movements as routine estate management. Even so, the overhang is real since the eventual distribution of billions of dollars in bitcoin to tens of thousands of creditors remains one of the longest-running supply questions in the market, and transfers like this one keep it in focus. The next signal to watch is whether any of the transferred bitcoin reaches an exchange, which would shift the interpretation from housekeeping to potential selling. Until then, the transfer stands as a reminder that the Mt Gox estate, more than a decade after the exchange’s collapse, still controls enough bitcoin to keep the market on alert.
Mt Gox Moves $953 Million in Bitcoin After Eight-Month Pause
Mt Gox moved about 10,608 BTC ($953 million) in its first large transfer in eight months, as creditor repayments slip to October 2026.
Mt Gox transferred 10,608 BTC ($953M) in June, its first major movement in eight months before October 2026 creditor repayments. The estate's $3.14B holding is one of the largest crypto concentrations; its distribution remains a key market supply variable.










