BTCC / BTCC Square / ZycryptoEN /
Was This the Largest Crypto Heist in History? Coinbase Exec Weighs In on $8 Billion BTC Mystery Transfer

Was This the Largest Crypto Heist in History? Coinbase Exec Weighs In on $8 Billion BTC Mystery Transfer

ZycryptoEN
Author:
ZycryptoEN
Release Time:
2025-07-06 00:03:46
0

An $8 billion Bitcoin transfer sparks chaos—was it a hack, a glitch, or something worse?

When an eye-watering $8 billion in BTC moved without explanation, the crypto world held its breath. A Coinbase executive drops the bombshell: this wasn’t just a whale flexing—it might’ve been a heist.

Theories swirl as blockchain sleuths scramble for answers. Was it an inside job? A sophisticated exploit? Or just another day in the wild west of digital assets?

Meanwhile, Wall Street bankers clutch their pearls—because nothing says 'secure store of value' like an $8 billion vanishing act. Stay tuned for the next episode of 'Crypto: Trust Us, We’re Professionals.'

Bitcoin Is Digital Gold And The Upcoming Halving Will Make It More Potent As A Store Of Value – Coinbase

On Thursday, a single entity transferred $8.6 billion worth of Satoshi-era Bitcoin from eight addresses that had held on to the BTC fortune for over 14 years.

Conor Grogan, the director of America’s biggest crypto exchange, Coinbase, suggested there is a chance the $8.6 billion BTC movement was caused by a hack that might set a new heist record.

Suspicious BCH Transaction Raises Alarm

“There is a small possibility that the $8B in BTC that recently woke up were hacked or compromised private keys,” Grogan observed, pointing out a suspicious Bitcoin Cash (BCH) transaction of over 10,000 tokens (valued at roughly $5 million at current prices) made before the main transfers involving 80,000 Bitcoin began.

The MOVE raised the likelihood of someone accessing legacy private keys and quietly testing them before commencing the massive BTC movements.

“There is a possibility that the owner was testing the private key in a way that wouldn’t get noticed,” Grogan said in a post on Twitter (aka X). “BCH isn’t monitored heavily by whale-watching services.”

The pundit stressed that he saw the behavior as unusual:

“What makes me say this is that the other BCH wallets have not been touched at all; why wouldn’t they also sweep these? It implies the actor may not have full access.”

Incoming Selling Pressure?

According to onchain sleuths, all of the bitcoin was moved into the original wallets on April 2 or May 4, 2011, and had remained untouched for over 14 years after initially receiving the coins in what is now colloquially known as the network’s “Satoshi era,” when its pseudonymous creator was still active online.

No individual or company has, so far, publicly claimed ownership of these wallets, but the timing and scope of the transfers left onlookers befuddled. This is particularly because enormous fund movements by OG wallets often hint at incoming selling pressure.

But in this case, the Bitcoin is still sitting in the eight new wallets and hasn’t been deposited into exchange addresses. 

Bitcoin was recently trading hands at $108,029 per coin, according to crypto data provider CoinGecko, after barely changing over a 24-hour timeframe despite the uncertainty. The leading cryptocurrency is about 3.4% down from the lifetime high of $111,814 it registered in May. 

Articles on this site are sourced from public networks or curated by AI for informational purposes only and do not represent BTCC’s views. Original rights belong to the respective authors. For copyright concerns, please contact [email protected]. BTCC assumes no liability for the accuracy, timeliness, or completeness of this information, and disclaims all liability arising from reliance on such content. This content is for reference only and should not be taken as investment, legal, or commercial advice.

|Square

Get the BTCC app to start your crypto journey

Get started today Scan to join our 100M+ users