#FOMCMeeting

Some serious old-school Bitcoin is on the move. Two wallets from the early “Satoshi era” have just stirred after more than a decade of silence—transferring a combined $325 million in BTC just ahead of the upcoming Fed interest rate decision. Coincidence? Crypto Twitter doesn’t think so.

According to Spot On Chain, the first whale moved 2,343 BTC—worth roughly $222.2M—into a new wallet after sitting untouched for 10.5 years. Those coins were originally acquired in July 2013 for just $185,850, at an average cost of $85 per $BTC .

Shortly after, a second long-dormant wallet came to life. This one transferred 1,079 BTC$BTC (about $102.5M), which had been idle for over 11 years. Bought around the same time in 2013 for only $91K, that stash has grown into a massive fortune.

Why now? That’s the million-dollar question. Could be rediscovered keys, ownership transfers, or simply whales finally deciding to make a move. But the timing—just ahead of the Fed’s rate announcement on May 7—is hard to ignore.

Market watchers expect the Fed to keep rates steady at 4.25%–4.50%, as uncertainty lingers amid recent economic turbulence, including new U.S. tariff moves.

In short: long-lost Bitcoin is surfacing, and the macro backdrop is getting spicy. Buckle up—this week could get wild in the crypto world.