Holders of archaic Bitcoins moved tens of millions of dollars to exchanges as Bitcoin fell and energy prices rose after attacks on oil and gas infrastructure in the Persian Gulf deepened the conflict involving Iran, Israel and the United States.
Ancient whale “bc1ql” sent 1,000 Bitcoin (BTC) to Binance on Wednesday, worth approximately $71 million at current prices, According to to the Arkham blockchain data platform. Whale initially bought 5,000 BTC 13 years ago and still holds approximately 1,500 BTC worth approximately $106 million, According to to the Onchain Lens blockchain analytical platform.
On the same day, one of the first Bitcoin holders, Owen Gunden, also transferred 650 BTC ($46 million) to cryptocurrency exchange Kraken, marking his first major sale in five months when he sold a total of 11,000 BTC ($1.12 billion). According to to the Lookonchain analytical platform.
These transfers added to signs of profit-taking among some long-term bondholders as investors reacted to broader risk-off resulting from the Middle East energy shock.
The whale movements follow reports of Israel striking Iran’s giant South Pars gas field on Wednesday killing Iran’s Intelligence Minister Esmail Khatib, third senior Iranian figure assassinated in the last few days, BBC reported. South Pars is part of the world’s largest natural gas field, with facilities located in Qatar and Iran.
After the strikes, the price of Brent crude rose above $119 a barrel before falling to around $114.77, while WTI briefly reached $100 and later traded near $96.59. According to to data from Trading Economics.
Wholesale gas prices in Europe and the UK also rose after Iran attacked the Ras Laffan gas complicated in Qatar on Wednesday and Thursday. reported Bloomberg news service.
Related: Binance says US medium-term indices could strengthen Bitcoin and stocks
The bitcoin selloff began after the attack on the gas complicated in Qatar
According to Aurelie Barthere, chief research analyst at crypto intelligence platform Nansen, Bitcoin’s latest sell-off occurred shortly after Iran attacked Qatar’s energy infrastructure.
“BTC began to sell off yesterday around noon CET due to the escalation of the war between Iran and Israel and the attack on gas infrastructure in Qatar,” Cointelegraph said, adding:
“If we can’t sustain the $70-71K level, we could go back to the previous range of around $60-71K.”
According to CoinMarketCap, Bitcoin’s price dropped by 5% in the last 24 hours and was trading at $70,439 at 10:15 UTC data.

Bitcoin’s decline reflects a 4.2% drop in gold prices over the past 24 hours, while the leading precious metal was trading at $4,686 an ounce on Thursday, according to goldprice data.
The simultaneous decline in both assets suggests that investors are planning a “broader risk-off” rather than a shift toward safe-haven assets, Alvin Kan, Bitget Wallet’s chief operating officer, told Cointelegraph.
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