Hackers Move $3.55B Worth of Bitcoin From 2016 Bitfinex Hack

Hackers Move $3.55B Worth of Bitcoin From 2016 Bitfinex Hack
Bad actors will have a tough time cashing out the stolen bitcoin as most of them are blacklisted.
By Omkar Godbole
Feb 1, 2022 at 7:55 a.m. GMT
Updated Feb 1, 2022 at 5:09 p.m. GMT

Source code from the master branch of open-source Bitcoin Core code repository on GitHub. (GitHub, modified by CoinDesk)

Large amounts of bitcoin stolen from the cryptocurrency exchange Bitfinex six years ago were moved by hackers early on Tuesday.

"So far this morning, 94,643.29 bitcoins ($3.55 billion) have been moved in 23 transactions, from a wallet associated with a theft from Bitfinex in 2016, to a new address," blockchain analytics firm Elliptic said. These originate from a theft suffered by Bitfinex in 2016, the firm added.
"It is unlikely that these funds will be cashed out any time soon. Funds from this hack have been slowly laundered for over five years now and cashing-out large volumes over a short period of time would draw unwanted attention," Elliptic said.
The number of bitcoin transferred amounted to 79% of the total 119,756 bitcoins drained from Bitfinex in 2016, one of the biggest bitcoin hacks to date.
Twitter account Whale Alert had earlier reported on this development, saying that bad actors transferred 10,000 bitcoins worth more than $383 million to an unknown wallet during Asian hours on Tuesday.
Hackers last moved the stolen bitcoin in April 2021, transferring over $700 million worth of coins to unknown wallets during the bull frenzy brought on by crypto exchange Coinbase's then impending listing on Nasdaq. According to Elliptic, the funds were laundered through darknet markets like Hydra and privacy-focused Wasabi wallet.
Igor Data, CEO of Geneva-based BLIN Analytics, said Hydra and Wasabi might be used again.
"Hydra breaks the link between the incident and further transactions, and Wasabi Wallet provides the necessary level of anonymization, including the ability to hide the connection not only to Bitfinex Hack but also to Hydra," Data said in a LinkedIn chat. "The hackers obviously use the automation tools to reduce the chance of error, which could lead to the hackers being caught."
A movement of malicious funds usually raises suspicion of bad actors looking to cash out and spooks markets.
As noted in April last year, most of the bitcoin associated with the Bitfinex hack is widely tracked and blacklisted. Thus, hackers will have a tough time cashing out on prominent centralized exchanges.
In other words, the latest movement of the hacked coins presents little downside risk to bitcoin. At press time, the cryptocurrency was trading largely unchanged on the day near $38,500.