Throughout July, bitcoin has climbed 2.5% against the U.S. dollar, despite a midweek dip to $64,350 per coin. This month has been marked by notable events, including movements by Mt Gox and the U.S. government transferring billions. Additionally, 76 transactions from dormant bitcoin wallets, created between 2010 and 2017, spent 6,536.17 BTC, amounting to $424 million.
6,536 Idle Bitcoins Stir
Several long-inactive bitcoin addresses, untouched for seven years or more, have become active for the first time since their creation. Recently, Bitcoin.com News covered the significant amounts of BTC moved by wallets created in 2017. Notably, addresses from 2013 were responsible for the largest sum spent this month, with 2,260.008 BTC moved across 18 distinct transactions.
Btcparser.com stats for July show the number of the 2013 transfers shared similar amounts and spending behavior. On July 5, a single entity moved 1,004.49 BTC, and later, on July 25, another wallet from 2013 transferred 750 BTC. 2017 bitcoin spending ranked the second highest, with 23 transfers totaling 1,636.94 BTC. The largest transfer from 2017 occurred on July 29, when 777.91 BTC was moved.
Meanwhile, addresses created in 2016 saw 1,636.94 BTC spent across 16 separate transactions. Wallets created in 2016 revealed some intriguing patterns, such as an entity that spent 19.99 BTC, followed by three more transactions over 15 BTC each, concluding with another 19.99 BTC—all within block 850,795. On July 7, 895.11 BTC was spent from an address created in 2016.
Notably, sleeping bitcoin wallets from 2012 had a significant amount of activity, with 1,074.12 BTC transferred through four transactions. One notable transaction on July 14 shifted 1,000 BTC from an address created on Sept. 25, 2012. In July, 2015 wallets only recorded three transactions, transferring a total of 201.46 BTC, with the largest spender moving 125.01 BTC in a single transaction.
Addresses originating from the year 2014 moved a much smaller 68.3785 BTC spread across seven transfers, while 2011 wallets transferred 41.76 BTC through four transactions. A 2010 wallet became active in July, but only 10 BTC was transferred in a single move. Altogether, the total amount of bitcoin spent from these sleeping addresses in July reached 6,536.17 BTC, valued at $424 million based on current exchange rates.
The phenomenon of dormant bitcoin wallets spending significant amounts of BTC is an intriguing one. It sheds light on the open nature of blockchain transactions and their underlying transactions. In this case, we observe a cluster of bitcoin addresses created between 2010 and 2017, which remained inactive for years, suddenly becoming active in July.
The observation of waves in spending behavior, where multiple dormant wallets became active around the same time or use similar patterns, could suggest that certain external factors (like market fluctuations or news events) influenced these decisions. In total, the amount of bitcoin spent from dormant addresses in July surpassed the previous month, with 4,681.438 BTC, valued at $294 million, spent in June.
What do you think about the number of sleeping bitcoin spends in July? Share your thoughts and opinions about this subject in the comments section below.