On Wednesday the 20th<\/sup> of May at 12:54 UTC, 50 BTC was moved<\/a> from a wallet that has not had any activity since February 2009. The coins were awarded to the address for successfully mining Bitcoin block 3654, at a time when the block reward was 50 BTC. Having just undergone the latest halving, the block reward is now only 6.25 BTC. At the time of the transaction occurring, the value of the Bitcoin moved amounted to $488,000 USD.<\/p>\n
The movement of this old Bitcoin is the first time since August 2017<\/a> that coins mined in early 2009 have been moved. Movement of coins from this era often spook the market, due to the perceived threat of an old Bitcoin whale cashing out their stash and crashing the market price of Bitcoin.<\/p>\n
This particular transaction was flagged by Whale Alerts<\/a>, a popular Twitter account that tracks large movements of cryptocurrency, as potentially originating from a wallet controlled by Satoshi Nakamoto, the anonymous Bitcoin creator. Though it is difficult to come up with an exact number, estimates put the number of Bitcoin in Satoshi\u2019s old wallets<\/a> at around 980,000 BTC, or roughly $9.3 billion USD at today\u2019s prices.<\/p>\n
Considering roughly 4.7% of all Bitcoin ever to be created has been mined by Satoshi, there is a strong likelihood that even a small percentage of these coins being sold would cause enormous downward pressure on the cryptocurrency market. With that being said, all evidence suggests that Satoshi has never actually spent any of his accumulated Bitcoin. Furthermore, no one has heard from the anonymous Bitcoin founder since the 12th<\/sup> of December 2010, with his last post<\/a> on the bitcointalk.org forum being about implementing DoS (denial-of-service) protection for Bitcoin. The most recent movement of old Bitcoin also does not conform to the \u2018Patoshi pattern<\/a>\u2019, a pattern of \u2018nonces\u2019 common in early Bitcoin blocks, which has typically been used to designate which blocks were mined by Satoshi.<\/p>\n