Mt. Gox repayments due Oct. 31: Will a supply wave hit BTC?

Mt. Gox trustees face a deadline on Oct. 31 to complete Base, Early lump-sum, and Intermediate repayments for Bitcoin creditors (BTC), with roughly 34,689 BTC still sitting in Mt. Gox-linked wallets as the clock ticks down.

The Tokyo court extended the original cutoff date of Oct. 31, 2024, by one year after processing delays and missing documentation stalled distributions that began in July 2024.

The trustee delivers Bitcoin and Bitcoin Cash through designated exchanges, such as Bitstamp and Kraken, or in cash to creditors who did not request cryptocurrency.

Oct. 31 marks a completion date, not a single payout event, and the trustee reports that these stages are “largely completed” for creditors who have submitted all required information.

The backdrop raises questions about whether exchanges will absorb a late-month supply wave or creditors will route coins through custody and over-the-counter channels.

Stage What it does Prerequisites / trigger Asset form & route Timing window Other mechanics
Base Repayment Mandatory first layer; includes Small-Sum up to ¥200,000; protects fiat claims; reduces post-Base balance. Court time-confirmation; creditor KYC/portal complete; Agency Receipt Agreement with exchange/custodian. JPY via bank/transfer provider; BTC/BCH via designated exchanges or BitGo per creditor selection. Crypto distributions since Jul 5, 2024; finish-by Oct 31, 2025 (JST). Can run alongside Early; must precede Intermediate.
Early Lump-Sum Optional 21% of post-Base balance; irrevocable; generally replaces Intermediate/Final (limited risk-compensation exceptions). Creditor elected Early in portal; checks complete; trustee operationally ready with venues. Cash and/or BTC/BCH via the same rails as Base. Executed alongside Base for electing creditors; finish-by Oct 31, 2025 (JST). Early recipients typically forgo Intermediate and Final.
Intermediate Optional installment(s) for creditors who did not elect Early; between time-confirmation and Final. Base completed; court/operational clearance; funds designated by trustee. JPY and/or BTC/BCH via same rails (banks/transfer providers, exchanges, BitGo). May occur in batches up to Oct 31, 2025 (JST). Pro-rata across eligible claims; cannot precede Base.

Potential pathways

Of the original 142,000 BTC in the pool, approximately 107,000 BTC have been transferred to end recipients.

Glassnode reported 59,000 BTC reached exchanges by Jul. 29, 2024, while BitGo held roughly 33,023 BTC in tracked wallets by mid-August.

Additional batches followed through late summer, but the current split between exchange-bound and custodial flows remains undisclosed.

Three potential pathways shape how the remaining 34,689 BTC reaches markets before the deadline.

In a staggered-distribution scenario, creditors receive batches throughout October but choose to hold or transfer coins into custody, thereby minimizing immediate sell pressure.

Processing windows at Kraken and Bitstamp are up to 90 days and 60 days, respectively, which means that individual credits are disbursed on different dates even within the same repayment stage, spreading potential sales across weeks rather than concentrating them.

A second scenario sees creditors routing coins into over-the-counter desks, thereby draining liquidity from institutional buyers without hitting public order books.

OTC transactions bypass exchange infrastructure entirely, leaving spot volumes and basis trades unaffected while still completing distributions before Oct. 31.

The third scenario introduces surprise exchange inflows as batches of cleared custodial checks are added to Bitstamp or Kraken order books.

Concentrated inflows would be reflected in spot volumes, potentially compressing basis spreads and affecting ETF arbitrage flows as market makers rebalance their hedges.

Exchange-bound deliveries carry higher visibility than custodial or OTC paths, making sudden wallet movements a key signal for traders monitoring Mt. Gox addresses through the month-end deadline.

What does history tell?

Out of the roughly 107,000 BTC distributed, reports are that approximately 59,000 BTC reached exchanges, while around 33,000 BTC were processed through BitGo. The rest is not reported publicly. As a result, out of the 92,000 BTC tracked, 64.1% were sent to exchanges.

If applied to the remaining Bitcoin balance to be distributed, the worst-case scenario of a supply dump would be 22,253 BTC reaching the exchanges simultaneously. Bitcoin traded at $106,795.03 as of press time, representing a potential $2.4 billion sell pressure.

However, what drove the prices down for the entire crypto market last year on nearly the same date was the unwind of the yen carry trade, which sent BTC from $58,315.08 to $49,351.27 on Aug. 4.

Regarding Mt. Gox-related movements, Bitcoin’s price remained steady on Jul. 30, when 47,229 BTC were moved to three wallets. At the time, the amount represented $3.1 billion.

Mt Gox Wallet Outflows vs. BTC Price
Mt. Gox outflows totaled roughly 47,000 BTC in July 2024 and 13,000 BTC in August 2024, with another 10,000 BTC leaving wallets in April 2025.

As a result, even in the worst-case scenario of $2.4 billion hitting exchanges, Bitcoin’s history suggests that the price might just experience slight fluctuations.

The post Mt. Gox repayments due Oct. 31: Will a supply wave hit BTC? appeared first on CryptoSlate.

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