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Satoshi-era Bitcoin investor cashes out 80,000 BTC for $9B via Galaxy Digital

source-logo  cointelegraph.com 25 July 2025 23:09, UTC

An early Bitcoin (BTC) investor has sold 80,000 BTC through Galaxy Digital, in what the digital asset company described as one of the largest notional transactions in crypto history, though details regarding the date and execution price were not disclosed.

Galaxy Digital’s disclosure of the sale first appeared on PR Newswire late Friday, followed by a post on the company’s official blog about 30 minutes later. Cointelegraph reached out to Galaxy Digital for further details on the transaction, and although the company declined to comment further, they did confirm the authenticity of the press release.

Galaxy did not reveal the client’s identity but stated that the “transaction was part of the investor’s broader real estate planning strategy.”

The announcement came on a day of heightened volatility for Bitcoin, with the price briefly dipping below $115,000 on Friday, according to Cointelegraph.

Data from Lookonchain indicated several large transactions from Galaxy Digital throughout the day, totaling nearly 30,000 BTC, with most of the funds sent directly to exchanges.

Source: Lookonchain

These transactions were tied to a Bitcoin investor who moved 80,009 BTC from a dormant wallet earlier this month — coins that were later transferred to Galaxy, according to Lookonchain data from July 16–17.

Source: Lookonchain

Related: Satoshi-era $9.7B Bitcoin OG: Galaxy moves another $1.1B to exchanges

Despite heightened volatility, sold coins have been “fully absorbed,” analysts say

After a brief drop of nearly 4% on Friday, Bitcoin’s price quickly rebounded and was last seen trading above $117,300, according to Cointelegraph.

Jason Williams, analyst and author of Bitcoin Hard Money, noted that the entire sale has already been “fully absorbed by the market,” suggesting that prices are poised to move significantly higher.

“80,000 BTC, over $9 billion, was sold into open market order books, and bitcoin barely moved,” wrote Joe Consorti, head of growth at Theya, a Bitcoin custody infrastructure company.

Bitcoin’s price has surged this year, recently reaching a new all-time high above $123,000, driven by strong exchange-traded fund inflows, growing adoption in corporate treasuries and favorable regulatory developments in the United States.

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cointelegraph.com