The much-awaited Mt. Gox repayment process has begun, with the defunct exchange's bankruptcy estate moving 47,282 bitcoins
The bankruptcy estate of Mt. Gox has moved 47,282 bitcoins, out of the 140,000 pledged to satisfy creditors, in its first transaction to begin the repayment process.
The estate had announced last month that the repayments would begin in July.
“The repayments will be made from the beginning of July 2024,” Mt. Gox trustee Nobuaki Kobayashi had said in a press release at the time.
“We have taken time to ensure safe and reliable repayment to creditors, including technical remedies for safe repayments, compliance with financial regulations in each country, and discussion of repayment arrangements with the cryptocurrency exchanges.”
The estate will move funds to various exchanges, including Bitbank, Bitstamp, Kraken, BitGo, and SBI VC Trade.
These exchanges will then process individual transfers to Mt. Gox creditors who filed for their repayments.
The timeline for the transfers will vary depending on the internal policies of each exchange, with some exchanges likely to send the funds sooner and others facing delays.
The exchange’s announcement that it would finally be fulfilling its debts had led to increased selling pressure on bitcoin, as several whales began liquidating their assets, anticipating that the value of the largest cryptocurrency would drop.
As a result, bitcoin was unable to make any meaningful gains for the majority of last month.
As July began, bitcoin’s price started to decline from the second day of the month in anticipation of the repayments.
On July 5, bitcoin fell below the price of $54,000, a price point that it had not touched in several months.
Further dips are to be expected as the Mt. Gox-related assets reach their creditors.
Creditors are likely to sell large portions of their repayments as soon as they receive them, drastically increasing the selling pressure on the market.
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