TL;DR:
- Five addresses created in 2014 removed a total of 107 Bitcoin from circulation through simultaneous transfers.
- The funds were sent to a recognized public address within the network for irreversibly destroying access to the assets.
- The total cost for processing the executed transactions on the network was set at $5.56 in network fees.
During last Monday’s session, an unknown actor removed 107 Bitcoin from global circulation, effectively sending them to an irreversible burn address. The transaction, valued at $8.2 million at the time of execution, caught the attention of analysts due to the simultaneous nature of the transfers from five different wallets.
The movements registered on the blockchain direct the assets to the public address known as 1111111111111111111114oLvT2. According to historical data from the network explorer, this wallet accumulated a total balance of 807 Bitcoin as of Tuesday, representing nearly $61 million under current market conditions. Records indicate that the five source accounts had remained inactive since their creation in 2014.
Amid all this activity, the price of Bitcoin traded around $76,000 on Tuesday. This value sits below the all-time high of $126,000 reached in October of last year. Based on that historical valuation, the volume of cryptocurrencies destroyed on Monday would have reached an estimated value of $13.4 million.


Technical hypotheses behind the loss of funds
The exact synchronization of the transfers sparked technical debates among cryptographic industry specialists. Adam Back, CEO of the infrastructure firm Blockstream, suggested on his X account that the movement could be theoretically interpreted as an accidental quantum bounty. This hypothesis is linked to ongoing debates regarding the risks that quantum computers pose to legacy cryptographic schemes.
On the other hand, independent developers pointed to the possibility of an automated security mechanism. Analysis of the transaction structure reveals time-based parameters, which, according to industry experts, matches the design of a dead man’s switch. This protocol automatically transfers funds if the owner fails to interact with the system within a specified timeframe.
The network’s technical documentation confirms that coins sent to these addresses cannot be claimed by any user under current consensus rules.
There is also a theory of a preemptive strategy against physical extortion. According to security analysts, the definitive transfer of funds to an inaccessible wallet eliminates the economic incentive in the event of a direct coercion attempt against the custodian of the private keys.
The confirmation of these transfers within the public ledger definitively reduces Bitcoin’s circulating supply, marginally increasing the physical scarcity of the asset across global exchange markets.





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