Defunct Japanese crypto exchange Mt. Gox on Thursday transferred Bitcoin worth $2.7b to a new wallet address. It marks the exchange’s first significant transaction since May, following several smaller test transactions on Wednesday.
Arkham Intelligence reported in a Thursday X post that a cold storage wallet Mt. Gox owns moved 47,228 BTC to a wallet address ending with “6onk.”
This transfer coincides with the exchange’s creditor repayments scheduled early this month, as it aims to distribute $9b in Bitcoin to creditors.
In June, the exchange’s trustee Nobuaki Kobayashi assured creditors that repayment preparations were finalized and would begin early July, per the plan.
BREAKING
Mt Gox moves 47,228 BTC ($2.71 billion dollars) from cold storage to a new wallet. pic.twitter.com/3ZdSlC1IX2
— Arkham (@ArkhamIntel) July 5, 2024
Creditors are finally seeing a light at the end of the tunnel over a decade since the exchange’s collapse after a 2014 hack. A verification process in January that the trustee spearheaded has cleared the path for the funds’ delayed return. The exact dates for payouts to designated exchanges are still under wraps. But the process appears to be moving forward.
The total disbursement is expected to include 142,000 Bitcoin, 143,000 Bitcoin Cash, and 69 billion yen by Oct. 2024.
Several Mt. Gox creditors have recently updated their claims, signaling advancements in receiving repayments in both crypto and fiat.
Initial reports emerged on the Mt. Gox insolvency Subreddit around mid-April. That’s when users highlighted details about expected payments in their account’s repayment data table. Additionally, some creditors reported successful receipt of fiat currencies in their bank accounts.
However, a dark cloud hangs
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