Mt. Gox, a long-bankrupt crypto exchange, has transferred around $172.5 million worth of Bitcoin to an unknown wallet as the cryptocurrency continues to trade above $100,000.

Arkham Intelligence shows the exchange moved a total of roughly 1,619.6 Bitcoin (BTC) to two untagged addresses on Dec. 17, split between a 1427.9 BTC and a 191.7 BTC transfer. 

A portion of the 1427.9 BTC transfer ended up in a wallet starting with “1DeY” after moving through another, less about 108 BTC. 

The 108 BTC and the 191.7 BTC then cycled through several wallets before ending up at a wallet starting with “1KLr,” currently holding 300 BTC.

It’s unclear why Mt. Gox has moved the funds. The exchange fell into bankruptcy in early 2014, and past movements of its Bitcoin holdings have soon been followed by creditor payouts.

A Mt. Gox wallet moved about 1619.6 BTC to two addresses before a portion was cycled through other wallets. Source: Arkham Intelligence

The latest moves come under two weeks after Mt. Gox on Dec. 5 shuffled over 24,000 Bitcoin, worth nearly $2.5 billion at the time, to an unknown address just 12 minutes after the cryptocurrency crossed $100,000 for the first time.

Arkham data shows the historic exchange still holds about 36,085 BTC worth $3.86 billion across wallets it controls, as Mt. Gox creditors can receive their payouts in Bitcoin if preferred.

Bitcoin has traded above $100,000 since Friday, Dec. 13, and Mt. Gox’s latest move — usually seen as bearish — seemed to have no effect as BTC has traded flat on the day at around $106,500 after hitting a fresh high of $107,857 late on Dec. 16, per TradingView.

In October, the trustee in charge of the bankrupt exchange’s Bitcoin stack pushed the deadline for creditor repayments by a full year to Oct. 31, 2025. 

It said many of those it owed “still have not received their repayments because they have not completed the necessary procedures for receiving repayments.”

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