More than 107 BTC worth roughly $8m was recently sent to Bitcoin's best-known burn address in a series of unusual transactions that on-chain analysts say may involve wallets linked to the collapsed Mt. Gox exchange. Blockchain monitor SaniExp first flagged five separate transfers sent to the provably unspendable Bitcoin address 1111111111111111111114oLvT2, commonly referred to as Bitcoin's burn address. Because no private keys exist for the address, any BTC sent there becomes permanently inaccessible. AMLBot later claimed some of the wallets involved were linked to historical Mt. Gox receiving addresses. According to the firm, one wallet that previously received 20 BTC had gradually transferred funds to Kraken before burning its remaining 1.42 BTC on 25 May. Intent behind the transfers remains unclear Neither SaniExp nor AMLBot identified the entity responsible for the transfers, and the purpose behind the burns remains uncertain. Possible explanations range from deliberate coin destruction and operational mistakes to privacy-related wallet activity or symbolic on-chain actions. Bitcoin burns of this size remain relatively uncommon because the asset's supply is already permanently capped at 21 million coins. The transactions have attracted additional attention because wallets associated with Mt. Gox continue to receive heavy scrutiny from traders and analysts. The bankrupt exchange still holds historical significance across crypto markets due to its long-running creditor repayment process and the large amount of dormant BTC tied to the platform's collapse. Burn address activity permanently removes BTC from circulation Unlike exchange transfers or treasury reshuffling, coins sent to Bitcoin burn addresses cannot be recovered or moved again. That effectively removes the BTC from circulating supply permanently. While 107 BTC represents only a tiny fraction of Bitcoin's total supply, the unusual nature of the transactions has fueled speculation across crypto communities. At the time of writing, no evidence had emerged linking the transfers directly to the Mt. Gox estate itself. The alleged connection currently stems from wallet tracing claims published by AMLBot. Final Summary More than 107 BTC, worth roughly $8m, was sent to Bitcoin's burn address in five separate transactions. AMLBot claimed some of the wallets involved were linked to historical Mt. Gox receiving addresses. However, the reason behind the burns remains unknown.
Mysterious Bitcoin burn revives scrutiny around dormant Mt. Gox-linked wallets
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