Why did someone just burn 107 BTC forever?

Source Cryptopolitan

The burn address on the Bitcoin network just destroyed 107 BTC forever. The address received five transactions, causing analysts to seek the reason behind destroying the coins. 

On-chain analysts intercepted a curious Bitcoin transaction. In a series of transfers, an unknown user deposited a total of 107 BTC to the most widely known Bitcoin burn address.

Cypher researcher and BTC Blockstream founder Adam Back suggested the burn address is now a potential quantum computing bounty. 

The burn address has already received a total of 807 BTC, sent over the years for various reasons. Usually, the address receives small amounts of BTC as a way to create on-chain records. 

The burn recalls a case in early 2025 when a user burned 500 ETH to send a permanent message on the blockchain.

Why is BTC being destroyed?

The destruction of 107 BTC slightly increased the amount of coins beyond reach. In this case, the transfer was deliberate. The only thing that united the burn transactions from five different wallets was a timelock. 

The transactions were automated with a locktime parameter, waiting for block 950,958. The sender overpaid two times the usual transaction fee to make sure the transfers would be automated and included in the block.

The transaction happened just as BTC recovered above $77,500. The leading coin was not showing signs of capitulation, as most whales held onto their reserves. 

Some of the transfers came from Stacks.co, which used the BTC burns to secure its own chain. The address has been around since 2015, and was known to Bitcointalk forum members. 

The burn address was especially created so that its public key is all zeroes. The calculation to go from the public to the private key would be intractable, even extremely difficult for hypothetical quantum computing. 

The address was of interest in the early days of BTC. In general, BTC has a holding ethos, but no known practice of burning coins to diminish the supply. 

BTC burned by old whale wallet

The transactions to the burn address originated from a wallet that started accumulating BTC in 2014. The wallet’s balance peaked at $2.5M at the end of 2025. The entire balance was then sent to the burn address on May 25.

Another connected address was also first created before 2015. The other wallet engaged in the burn received coins from Poloniex and Bitfinex, a usual step for early BTC adopters. The last address used sent some of the BTC to Kraken for trading a year ago. 

The usage of several addresses and the synchronized transaction to the burn destination suggests a single entity may have decided to destroy 107 BTC. 

On-chain researchers had no answer for the transfers, which looked deliberate. Each of the involved addresses sent the full BTC balance, previously held for years. 

The transfers looked like a form of capitulation, which did not even sell the BTC for profit. The burn looks like a previous move by a whale that bought 27 BTC and sent them to one of the inactive addresses of Satoshi Nakamoto. 

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Disclaimer: For information purposes only. Past performance is not indicative of future results.
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