Cryptocurrency

Vitalik Buterin-linked biotech charity Kanro transfers $15M to fund grant

Blockchain sleuths have zeroed in on a recent transaction from a wallet associated with Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin, where he transferred $14.9 million worth of USD Coin (USDC) to the cryptocurrency exchange Gemini.

According to an Oct. 17 post from blockchain analytics firm PeckShield on X, Buterin’s wallet “Vitalik.eth” transferred $14.93 million to Gemini on Oct. 16.

The transaction was independently verified by Cointelegraph on Etherscan.

Vitalik received the original sum of 14.93 million USDC from Kanro, a charity affiliated with Vitalik on Oct. 14.

Separate analysis from crypto data provider Lookonchain found that Buterin had also recently transferred nearly $500,000 to Coinbase three days prior.

The price of Ethereum’s native currency Ether (ETH) held steady following news of the transfer, falling just 0.68% in the past four hours, according to price data from Coingecko.

The price of Ether (ETH) held flat following the news of the transfer. Source: CoinGecko

Related: Ethereum losing streak vs. Bitcoin hits 15 months — Can ETH price reverse course?

Buterin’s most recent transaction is the latest in a spate of ETH deposits to centralized exchanges over the past few months, with the total transfers from Buterin’s wallets totalling more than $3.9 million in September.

On Sept. 24, Buterin transferred 400 ETH — worth $600,000 at the time — to Coinbase. Cointelegraph previously reported a 600 ETH ($1 million) transaction from the vitalik.eth address on Aug. 21, which was also identified by on-chain monitoring platforms.

Magazine: Are DAOs overhyped and unworkable? Lessons from the front lines

Articles You May Like

How the Federal Reserve’s rate policy affects mortgages
Municipals close tumultuous week steadier, but damage done to returns
Oklahoma County seeks to settle battle over bond-financed jail site
The Fed cut interest rates, but mortgage costs jumped. Here’s why
Wall Street’s fear gauge — the VIX — saw second-biggest spike ever on Wednesday