Mysterious Bitcoin Whale Transfers $40 Million After Years Of Silence
Eight Satoshi-era wallets moved 10,000 Bitcoin each in July last year, triggering waves of speculation across crypto markets. Now, another old wallet has come back to life — and traders are watching closely. A Long Wait...
Eight Satoshi-era wallets moved 10,000 Bitcoin each in July last year, triggering waves of speculation across crypto markets. Now, another old wallet has come back to life — and traders are watching closely.
A Long Wait EndsOn Sunday, a Bitcoin address that had not seen any activity since November 2013 suddenly moved its entire holdings to a new wallet.
Blockchain tracking service Whale Alert detected the transfer at around 19:16 UTC. The coins, worth roughly $40 million at current prices, had been sitting untouched for more than a decade. Back when they were first acquired, Bitcoin traded at a fraction of what it does today.
The sending address — 1KAA8GGhVjjUjVTz1HKAjCyGN…. — transferred the funds to bc1qm6m6d33d02edr0k8yj9jgt027zl6d….. No one has publicly claimed ownership of the original wallet. No explanation for the move has been offered either.
A dormant address containing 500 $BTC (40,717,094 USD) has just been activated after 12.5 years (worth 482,898 USD in 2013)!https://t.co/OBUcZ1rXQg
— Whale Alert (@whale_alert) May 10, 2026
Where The Coins WentThe destination address does not match any known cryptocurrency exchange. That detail matters to traders. When large Bitcoin sums move directly to exchange wallets, it often signals a potential sale.
In this case, no such connection has been found. Reports indicate the transfer may point to a security update, a redistribution of holdings across separate addresses, or simply a long-dormant holder deciding to act after years of staying put.
Bitcoin crossed the $100,000 mark in late 2024 and has held near record highs since. Data shows that older wallets have been reactivating at a higher rate over the past year.
Holders who bought Bitcoin during its earliest days and never touched their coins appear to be reviewing their positions as prices climb.
A Pattern EmergingThis latest move fits a pattern that blockchain analysts have tracked for months. Wallets tied to Bitcoin’s early years have been waking up with increasing frequency.
The July wave — when multiple Satoshi-era addresses each moved 10,000 BTC for the first time in 14 years — drew significant attention from the crypto community. Sunday’s transfer adds to that trend.
Markets have not reacted sharply. But traders will keep a close eye on the newly activated address. Large amounts of Bitcoin moved by unknown wallets rarely go unnoticed, and any follow-up activity will likely draw immediate scrutiny from analysts monitoring the chain.
Featured image from Pexels, chart from TradingView
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