CryptoIntelligence
February 6, 2026 7:16 PM UTC

Mt. Gox Moves $739 Million in Bitcoin Ahead of Final Repayment Deadline

The bankrupt cryptocurrency exchange Mt. Gox transferred more than 10,400 Bitcoin worth approximately $739 million to a new wallet on Tuesday, its largest single movement of funds in months and the biggest on-chain transfer it has made ahead of the looming October 2026 creditor repayment deadline. Blockchain analytics platform Arkham Intelligence recorded the transaction at 04:47 UTC in Bitcoin block 952,072. The total movement split into two streams. The majority, 10,306 Bitcoin worth around $730.78 million, was routed to a previously unseen address with no prior transaction history. A smaller portion of 116 Bitcoin, valued at approximately $8.25 million, was sent to a known Mt. Gox hot wallet and has already been marked as spent. A separate follow-up transaction moved an additional 116 Bitcoin to another address, with a small test transfer also recorded to a Bitstamp cold wallet. The structure of the transfer closely mirrors earlier administrative movements the estate has made ahead of creditor distributions. Despite the scale, analysts noted the funds have not yet reached any custodian or exchange, meaning no confirmed selling activity has occurred. Mt. Gox still controls roughly 34,504 Bitcoin, valued at approximately $2.43 billion, making it the largest unresolved concentrated holding tied to any failed crypto exchange. Repayments to creditors began in mid-2024 through registered partner exchanges including Kraken and Bitstamp, and around 19,500 creditors have received funds to date. Rehabilitation trustee Nobuaki Kobayashi has pushed back the final distribution deadline twice. A Tokyo court approved the most recent extension in October 2025, moving the cutoff from October 31, 2025 to October 31, 2026, citing incomplete creditor procedures and unresolved processing issues. The transfer landed at a sensitive moment. Bitcoin had already been under pressure from sustained ETF outflows and weakening market sentiment before the news broke, and the announcement accelerated the sell-off. The price broke below $70,000 and at one point touched levels near $68,950, its lowest since April. The concern circulating across markets relates to what happens when the remaining creditors eventually receive their Bitcoin. Most of those claims were purchased before the exchange collapsed in 2014, meaning any distribution at current prices would represent extraordinary gains. The potential for profit-taking at scale has loomed over the market as a recurring overhang for more than a year. However, some analysts argued the Mt. Gox dynamic is now far less dangerous than it once appeared. One market commentator suggested the issue has become closer to a recurring headline than a genuine source of meaningful downside pressure, noting that the market has grown more sensitive to ETF flows, macroeconomic signals, and institutional positioning than to the estate’s remaining holdings. Earlier rounds of creditor distributions in 2024 did not seriously disrupt Bitcoin trading. Strive Asset Management has also moved to reduce the potential market impact by purchasing approved but undistributed Mt. Gox creditor claims worth an estimated $8 billion, with the firm targeting a Bitcoin treasury of up to 75,000 BTC. Under that approach, some creditors may sell claims directly to institutional buyers rather than receiving and then selling Bitcoin on the open market.

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