$2.5B in stolen BTC from Bitfinex hack awakens

Published at: Feb. 1, 2022

A chunk of the inactive Bitcoins (BTC) stolen in the 2016 Bitfinex exchange hack has moved from the hacker’s wallets to an unknown wallet on Tuesday, as detected by blockchain analytics bot Whale Alerts.

20 transactions involving the stolen Bitcoins were flagged. A sum of 64,641.29 BTC, worth almost $2.5 billion at the time of writing, was moved. This is more than half of the total amount seized by the hackers which are estimated to be around 120,000 BTC.

The biggest transaction detected was around 10,000 BTC, worth over $383 million, while other transactions amounted to as little as 0.29 BTC. The wallet address that received the blacklisted BTC now holds a total of 94,643.29 BTC, which is around $3.6 billion.

⚠ ⚠ ⚠ ⚠ ⚠ ⚠ ⚠ ⚠ ⚠ ⚠ 10,000 #BTC (383,540,711 USD) of stolen funds transferred from Bitfinex Hack 2016 to unknown wallethttps://t.co/kvvWQpZoq8

— Whale Alert (@whale_alert) February 1, 2022

While it’s impossible to determine the exact purpose as to why the hackers are moving the Bitcoins, speculators think it’s to scare investors into selling their BTC.

Back in 2021, as hackers moved 10,000 of their stolen BTC, Twitter user Alistair Milne hypothesized that since the hackers are unable to cash out, they may be moving the Bitcoins to induce market panic while having short positions. According to the user, the hackers can’t sell, but they can move the coins to “manipulate the market.”

Related: $1.5M in Stolen Bitcoin From 2016 Bitfinex Hack Changes Address

In 2019, some of the stolen BTC were returned to the exchange with the help of US authorities. In the same year, hack-related arrests were made in Israel, when the police tracked stolen fund movement that’s worth $1.5 million.

A year later, Bitfinex offered up to $400 million to anyone who can give information that could lead to the recovery of the stolen crypto. The amount will be considered as “costs of recovery” according to the exchange.

Tags
Related Posts
Bitfinex hackers move another $30M in stolen Bitcoin from 2016
Bitcoins (BTC) stolen from major cryptocurrency exchange Bitfinex back in 2016 are on the move again, as hackers shift another massive batch of funds to unknown wallets. According to data from crypto transaction tracking service Whale Alert, Bitfinex hackers moved more than $4.6 million in stolen BTC on Oct. 8. These funds were sent to unknown wallets in two separate transactions of 435 BTC and 8 BTC. But the hackers have moved far more than this amount earlier this week. According to Whale Alert, Bitfinex hackers completed seven more similar transactions on Oct. 7, totaling at 2,900 Bitcoin, or $26.4 …
Bitcoin / Oct. 8, 2020
Bitfinex Offers up to $400M for Information Leading to BTC Stolen in 2016
Crypto exchange Bitfinex is offering up to $400 million to anyone who can lead it to the hackers who stole over 120,000 Bitcoin (BTC) in August 2016. According to the company’s post on Aug. 4, it is even willing to reward the hackers themselves. The people behind the 2016 attack breached the security systems of Bitfinex and managed to complete around 2072 unauthorized transactions. The company clarified that this is its “latest effort” to recover these stolen funds. Bitfinex explained how the reward will work: “Those who put Bitfinex in contact with the hacker will receive 5% of the total …
Bitcoin / Aug. 4, 2020
$39M of Bitcoin Stolen in 2016 Bitfinex Hack Is on the Move
Some of the 119,756 Bitcoin that was stolen from crypto exchange Bitfinex in 2016 has started moving again. According to a series of tweets posted by Whale Alert on July 27-28, wallet addresses known to be associated with one of the largest breaches ever of a crypto exchange moved 3503 Bitcoin (BTC) — worth roughly $38.7 million — over 12 transactions. The largest individual movement was of 476.32 BTC, or approximately $5.2 million, while the smallest was 2.612703 BTC, or $28,849. Slowly moving billions in crypto To date, the hackers responsible for the Bitfinex breach have moved only 1-2% of …
Bitcoin / July 28, 2020
Making sense of the Bitfinex Bitcoin billions
It’s the Netflix script that wrote itself. A story so outlandish, it’s stunned the crypto community; an industry accustomed to apparent suicides in Spanish jail cells and nonfungible token auctions for dead rappers. The plot involves the United States Department of Justice (DoJ), a crypto exchange with a checkered history, a rapper-cum-Forbes magazine writer, a voucher to buy a new PlayStation, an occasional magician and $4 billion worth of Bitcoin (BTC). The alleged Bitfinex hack money launderers have kept the internet enraptured since the larger-than-life story emerged last week. It’s no wonder that Netflix has actually announced that they will …
Adoption / Feb. 16, 2022
Hodlers prefer centralized exchanges over DeFi for security: Chainalysis
Despite the rise of decentralized finance (DeFi), cryptocurrency investors appear to stick to centralized exchanges (CEX) over DeFi tools, according to a new report. Crypto investors are more comfortable with holding their assets on CEXes because decentralized exchanges are still more vulnerable to the threat of hacks. This is according to a joint report by the blockchain data firm Chainalysis and Bitfinex exchange, issued on Oct. 13. According to the study, the risks of hacks associated with CEXes have significantly dropped over the past few years, while various DeFi platforms have become increasingly hacked. The total value stolen from centralized …
Decentralization / Oct. 13, 2022