A regulatory bombshell has just exploded in the City of London: the UK Home Office is preparing to sell one of the largest crypto hoards seized in history. As The Block revealed today, citing a report from The Telegraph, the British government is preparing to auction or liquidate up to $7 billion in Bitcoin, accumulated following raids and operations against criminal networks in recent years.
The announcement is shaking analysts and traders because it could add massive selling pressure to the market just at a time of sensitive rally, with Bitcoin defending key levels after breaking its previous high.
UK's Largest Crypto Seizure
Much of this stockpile comes from confiscations from organized crime gangs, cyber fraud cases, and money laundering operations where BTC was the currency of choice. For years, these wallets were under the custody of the Metropolitan Police and the Home Office, but without a clear liquidation policy.
Now, according to The Telegraph, British officials want to convert that Bitcoin into fiat currency, possibly to bolster public budgets and fund new cybersecurity campaigns.
The volume is so high that it represents more than 1% of the total circulating BTC supply, a detail that worries institutional traders and long-term holders.
How will they sell it?
The exact method is not yet confirmed, but everything points to imitating formulas previously used in the US: open auctions, staggered batches, or sales through private brokers that guarantee liquidation without suddenly plummeting the price.
The United Kingdom has previously carried out sales of seized BTC, but never on this scale. In 2021, it sold nearly $300 million in confiscated cryptocurrency, which pales in comparison to this record figure.
Analysts point out that, if done poorly, the sale could generate waves of volatility, triggering trading bots and massive stop-losses. Conversely, an orderly liquidation could attract institutions looking to buy BTC at a discount.
What does this mean for the market?
The announcement comes as Bitcoin struggles to sustain its uptrend after reaching new highs driven by ETF inflows, institutional accumulation, and the sovereign adoption narrative.
If this sale goes poorly, it could push prices to critical support zones. But some optimistic investors believe the sale will be quickly absorbed, just as the US Silk Road auctions did years ago, which ultimately strengthened the BTC narrative as a solid asset.
Topic opinion:
Confiscated Bitcoin is a reminder that the crypto narrative is tied to regulation and governments. Today it's seized for crimes; tomorrow it may be sold to balance fiscal accounts or bolster security budgets.
This isn't new: the US already did it, Germany started liquidating BTC this year... and now the UK is proving that no government is going to sit on a mountain of satoshis forever.
The question is: who buys them? If institutional funds and whales absorb that liquidity, the pressure turns into an opportunity. If the sale is poorly filtered or done without a strategy, we'll see more volatility, wiped stops, and short-term traders burning their hands.
๐ฌ Do you think the market will absorb $7 billion without collapsing?
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