A Bitcoin wallet that has sat untouched for nearly 14 years has shown signs of life, executing a small transfer of 0.00079 BTC, equivalent to approximately $56. The wallet, identified by the legacy address beginning with 1NB3ZX, holds 2,100 BTC currently valued at around $147 million. The movement has drawn significant attention from onchain analysts and cryptocurrency traders who monitor long-dormant addresses.
According to data from BitInfoCharts, the address received its entire balance of 2,100 BTC in a single inflow on July 5, 2012, when Bitcoin traded at roughly $6.59 per coin. The initial outlay at the time amounted to approximately $13,800. At current market prices, that investment represents an unrealized gain of more than 10,000 times the original sum.
The activity was flagged by onchain monitoring services Whale Alert and LookonChain, which track addresses associated with Bitcoin’s earliest years, commonly referred to as Satoshi-era wallets. These platforms routinely watch for movements from addresses that accumulated coins during the cryptocurrency’s formative period. The wallet had recorded no transactions in the roughly 13 years and seven months between its funding and this recent transfer.
Reactions within the trading community have been divided. Some observers expressed admiration for the holder’s apparent discipline in retaining the position through numerous market cycles without selling. One comment circulating among traders read: “No leverage. No day trading. No stress. Just conviction and time. The hardest strategy is also the most profitable.” Others, however, offered a more practical interpretation of the small transfer.
A number of analysts suggest the more probable explanation is that the wallet’s owner recently recovered their seed phrase or private key after a prolonged period and is conducting a test transaction before moving a larger sum. Sending a small amount first is standard practice among holders returning to long-inactive wallets, allowing them to verify they retain control of the funds and that the destination address is accurate. Transactions of a few tens of dollars are commonly used for this purpose.
Market participants are now watching the wallet closely to determine whether additional transfers follow in the coming days, particularly any movements toward cryptocurrency exchanges or newly created addresses. A transfer to an exchange would typically signal an intention to sell, while a move to a fresh wallet might indicate the holder is reorganizing their holdings without liquidating. The outcome could have broader implications for market sentiment given the size of the position involved.
This latest development follows a similar event in January, when a separate Satoshi-era address that first accumulated Bitcoin in 2013 transferred its full balance of approximately 909 BTC, then worth around $85 million, to a new wallet after more than 13 years of inactivity. In that case, the holder realized a gain of roughly 13,900 times the original cost, as the coins had been acquired for less than $7 each. Together, these events have renewed discussion about the potential market impact of early Bitcoin holders choosing to move or liquidate their long-held positions.
Originally reported by CoinTelegraph.
