Matías Andrade and Tanay Ved have recently shared key takeaways from a Coin Metrics report which noted that Mt. Gox creditors are finally receiving repayments, “with approximately $9 billion worth of Bitcoin set for distribution in July.”
As mentioned in the Coin Metrics report, the repayment process appears “gradual and controlled, spread across multiple exchanges (including Kraken, Bitstamp, and Bitbank), reducing the likelihood of significant short-term market disruption.”
According to Coin Metrics report, market liquidity has “improved substantially since Mt. Gox’s collapse in 2014, potentially allowing for smoother absorption of distributed funds.”
In the annals of cryptocurrency history, few events have “left as indelible a mark as the collapse of Mt. Gox.”
Coin Metrics further noted that nearly a decade “after its spectacular downfall, the defunct Bitcoin exchange is making headlines once again as creditors finally begin to receive their long-awaited funds.”
Coin Metrics added that with approximately $9B worth of bitcoin “set for distribution, alongside sales of 50K BTC seized by the German Federal Criminal Police (BKA), the resolution of the Mt. Gox saga represents a pivotal moment in the maturation of the cryptocurrency ecosystem.”
In this issue of Coin Metrics’ State of the Network, they discuss “the significance of Mt. Gox, its tumultuous history, and the far-reaching implications of its collapse and subsequent payout on the broader crypto market.”
Mt. Gox, an acronym for “Magic: The Gathering Online eXchange,” began its life far removed from the world of cryptocurrencies.
Founded in 2006 by programmer Jed McCaleb, the platform was “initially designed as a trading card exchange for the popular game Magic: The Gathering.”
In 2010, as Bitcoin began to gain traction, McCaleb “repurposed the site into a Bitcoin exchange.”
The timing couldn’t have been more fortuitous. As one of the first Bitcoin exchanges, Mt. Gox quickly became the go-to platform “for those looking to buy and sell the nascent digital currency.”
In March 2011, McCaleb sold the platform “to Mark Karpelès, a French programmer living in Japan, who would oversee the exchange during its meteoric rise and catastrophic fall.”
Under Karpelès’ stewardship, Mt. Gox experienced explosive growth. By 2013, it had become the largest Bitcoin exchange in the world, “handling an estimated 70% of all Bitcoin transactions.”
Coin Metrics further noted that this “dominance gave Mt. Gox an outsized influence on the Bitcoin ecosystem, effectively making it the central pillar of the early cryptocurrency market.”
Despite its apparent success, Mt. Gox was plagued “by security issues and operational challenges.”
Coin Metrics aded that the first major blow “came in June 2011 when the exchange suffered a significant hack, resulting in the loss of 2,609 bitcoins, which were accidentally sent to a null address. Mt. Gox made a critical mistake in some of their transactions by using an incorrect script.”
Instead of including the proper Bitcoin address (a 160-bit hash) in the scriptPubKey, they mistakenly used the byte 0 (OP_0). This created a script that “could never be satisfied, effectively making the bitcoins sent to this “address” permanently lost.”
On February 7th, the exchange halted “all Bitcoin withdrawals, citing technical issues related to transaction malleability.”
Coin Metrics furter noted that “as days passed without resolution, panic began to spread among users. The situation reached its breaking point on February 28th, 2014, when Mt. Gox filed for bankruptcy protection in Tokyo. In its filing, the company made the shocking announcement that it had lost track of 850,000 bitcoins, worth around $468.5 million at the time. Of these, 750,000 belonged to customers, while 100,000 were the company’s own holdings.”
Coin Metrics also mentioned that this revelation “sent shockwaves through the cryptocurrency community and beyond. Mt. Gox, once the titan of Bitcoin trading, had collapsed under the weight of what appeared to be years of mismanagement and security failures. The chart below encapsulates the timeline of events that unfolded and their impact on BTC’s price action from 2010 to 2015.”
Fast forward to today, 10 years after the exchanges collapse: the Japanese rehabilitation trustee on behalf of Mt. Gox, Nobuaki Kobayashi, “issued a notice on June 24th stating that repayments of Bitcoin and Bitcoin Cash to creditors would begin in July. While this marks a long-awaited resolution for creditors, the prospect of asset distributions has caused jitters among market participants, concerned about potential supply pressure.”
In culmination, Mt. Gox lost “over 750K BTC from its users, and ~100K of their own holdings. Of this total, approximately 16% of these assets were recovered, making ~140K BTC eligible for redistribution. To understand the current state of affairs leading up to repayments, we can utilize Coin Metrics’ ATLAS, a blockchain search tool to illuminate the flow of funds between associated stakeholders and wallets.”
Coin Metrics added that on-chain data suggests “that wallets associated with Mt. Gox hold ~139K BTC in aggregate today (valued at ~$9B based on BTC’s market price as of July 15th). This amount was credited in a series of transfers on May 28th in what seemed to be a consolidation of balances to a single wallet.”
Visualizing the flow of funds for the account in question, we can see “outflows of 47.2K BTC (valued at ~$3B) to 3 distinct wallets which occurred on the same day.”
Since then, there have been several internal movements of funds “among Mt. Gox wallets indicating the small-scale commencement of repayments. Of the three accounts captured above, the (HoV68) wallet moved the 47.2K BTC to a wallet ending in (D5J6onk), which sent back 2701 BTC to the target account that initially received the recovered bitcoins (LAPs6). Subsequently, on July 5th, 1544 BTC (~$90M) was transferred to a hot wallet associated with Bitbank, one of the exchanges involved in the repayment process.”
As of now, a substantial portion of the recovered funds “remains in Mt. Gox wallets, indicating that large-scale repayments have yet to commence.”
Importantly, Coin Metrics noted that distributions will “take place through multiple exchanges such as Kraken, Bitstamp, Bitbank and others, decreasing the likelihood of an outsized market impact. Current data shows no material increase in deposits to these exchanges, a metric that may help gauge the progress of repayments. This absence of significant deposit activity suggests the distribution process is in its early stages and may be proceeding gradually.”
To assess the potential market impact from the repayment process, examining Bitcoin’s liquidity conditions “can also be instructive.” It is estimated that “of the 140K BTC, closer to ~65K BTC is to be distributed to individual creditors.”
It will be critical to examine market liquidity “during the following weeks when liquidation of Mt. Gox funds are likely to occur.”
Using Coin Metrics’ comprehensive coverage of exchange liquidity, we can “analyze the market’s capacity to absorb potential sales.”
The analysis illustrates the Market Depth of BTC (±1%) for USD and other stablecoin pairs (USDC, USDT, BUSD, FDUSD) from January to July of 2024.
Ask depth (colored in red) typically ranges “between $50M and $100M for limit orders within 1% of the current price.”
Given this market depth, and average daily volumes of around $15B for BTC alone, the distribution “of ~65K BTC (worth approximately $1.95B at current prices) could potentially be absorbed by the market over a period of a couple weeks without causing severe disruptions, assuming the liquidations are done gradually and across multiple exchanges. These findings, however, are only suggestive of the depth and maturity of the BTC market, but should assuage fears of liquidity shortage in the near-term.”
The resolution of the Mt. Gox saga marks “a significant milestone in cryptocurrency history.”
Coin Metrics added that nearly a decade after its collapse, the “commencement of creditor repayments signifies both the maturation of the crypto ecosystem and the lengthy process often required to resolve complex financial failures in this space.”
Coin Metrics concluded that the market participants “will likely closely monitor conditions as these wallets potentially liquidate their holdings over the coming weeks.”