When Germany liquidated almost 50,000 Bitcoin during summer 2024, the decision sparked widespread mockery. Today, as Bitcoin experiences significant downward pressure, that controversial move appears considerably more justified than it seemed mere months earlier.
Saxony’s law enforcement agencies confiscated approximately 50,000 BTC in January 2024 during operations against Movie2K, an illegal streaming platform.
German regulatory frameworks mandate swift liquidation of confiscated assets. Authorities moved aggressively, selling the complete holdings across just 23 days—from June 19 through July 12, 2024.
Transactions were executed via prominent cryptocurrency platforms, including Kraken, Bitstamp, Coinbase, Cumberland, and Flow Traders.
The final tally showed an average execution price of $57,900 per Bitcoin, yielding total proceeds near $2.89 billion.
Initially, cryptocurrency advocates condemned the strategy. Bitcoin subsequently more than doubled in value, with retrospective analyses suggesting the holdings could have commanded over $6.6 billion if held for another year.
Bitcoin recently dipped beneath $60,000 across Binance and Coinbase exchanges for the first time since 2024.
Blockchain analytics platform Arkham Intelligence has monitored this development closely. Their data indicates Bitcoin now trades merely 7% above Germany’s average sale price.
Another 6% contraction would position Bitcoin beneath Germany’s realized value—completely reversing the perception that authorities committed a monumental blunder.
When Bitcoin reached its 2025 zenith, Germany seemingly forfeited billions. That premium has evaporated from exceeding 100% to under 7%.
The downturn gained additional momentum as spot Bitcoin ETFs experienced $4.33 billion in redemptions across a 13-consecutive-day period—representing one of the most prolonged withdrawal streaks since these investment vehicles debuted.
Germany wasn’t the only nation making consequential cryptocurrency decisions in 2024, though peer governments pursued contrasting strategies.
El Salvador and Bhutan actively accumulated Bitcoin throughout that period instead of divesting. Meanwhile, the United States under the Biden administration began reducing its own cryptocurrency reserves.
Combined actions by the US, Germany, and Ukraine—which completely eliminated its holdings—reduced government-controlled Bitcoin reserves by 12% during 2024.
China and the United Kingdom maintained static positions, neither acquiring nor disposing of any holdings.
These divergent national approaches have generated substantial discussion as Bitcoin retreats from previous peaks.
Ultimate judgment on Germany’s decision hinges entirely on Bitcoin’s future trajectory. Currently, however, the differential has contracted dramatically.
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