As it happens, the long-defunct Tokyo-based cryptocurrency exchange Mt. Gox has posted a new update regarding the repayment of its creditors in an official July 6 correspondence by its Japanese bankruptcy trustee, Bloomberg’s Olga Kharif reported on July 7. In the letter, Mt. Gox’s trustee Nobuaki Kobayashi stated that preparations were underway “to make repayments in accordance with the approved rehabilitation plan of which confirmation order of the Tokyo District Court was made final and binding on November 16, 2021.” Furthermore, the trustee asked the creditors to log in to the online Rehabilitation Claim Filing System, review the related documents, and express how they preferred to receive their repayments. That said, the trustee didn’t specify any amounts or dates other than that:
Potential pressure on the price of Bitcoin
According to the report, previous documents show that, as of September 2019, the trustee held 141,686 Bitcoin (currently worth over $3 billion), as well as Bitcoin Cash (BCH) coins and fiat. Bloomberg’s crypto investing expert Aaron Brown warned that the distribution of these assets could put pressure on the price of Bitcoin. As he explained: At press time, the price of Bitcoin stood at $21,648, recording a 5.52% increase on the day, as well as a 12.67% gain across the previous seven days, according to CoinMarketCap data.
How Mt. Gox troubles started
As a reminder, Mt.Gox used to be the largest Bitcoin exchange in the world until it lost about 850,000 Bitcoin worth around $500 million at the time to unknown hackers. The incident led to the exchange stopping all its trading and going offline in February 2014, affecting close to 24,000 creditors. To date, reportedly, only 150,000 of the stolen Bitcoin have been recovered. Back in October 2021, Finbold reported on the finalization of the voting period for the Mt. Gox civil rehabilitation plan, after the Tokyo District Court approved its draft in December 2020 and issued an order in February 2021 allowing creditors to vote on it.