Winklevoss twins move 1,000 BTC to Gemini hot wallet, stoking selloff fears as BTC tumbles Cameron and Tyler Winklevoss transferred 1,000 BTC — roughly $67.5 million at current prices — from Gemini Custody to a Gemini-linked hot wallet on June 3, according to on-chain sleuthing by Arkham Intelligence. The move drew quick attention because transfers into exchange hot wallets are commonly read by traders as a potential prelude to selling. The transaction coincided with a wobble in markets: Bitcoin briefly dipped below $66,000 amid renewed military exchanges between the U.S. and Iran, which sparked a broader risk-off reaction across financial markets. At press time BTC was trading near $67,100, down about 4.5% on the day after already having broken key support around $72,000 and $68,000. Derivatives liquidations amplified the slide, with more than $1 billion in bullish BTC positions wiped out, feeding further downward pressure. No confirmed sale Arkham flagged the transfer on X but has not reported any subsequent sales. Gemini and the Winklevosses have not commented, leaving multiple possible explanations open — from preparing liquidity for operational needs to internal custody adjustments — rather than a definitive sell order. Still, large moves from long-term holders toward exchange infrastructure often prompt speculation during volatile stretches. A pattern of large transfers This is not the first time the Gemini founders’ wallets have shown heavy activity. In March they moved roughly $130 million in Bitcoin to exchange wallets over the course of a week, transactions also tied to Gemini hot-wallet addresses, according to earlier reporting. Arkham’s ledger currently attributes about $692 million in digital assets to the Winklevosses, with Bitcoin making up the lion’s share. Wider market signals Blockchain watchers also noted a roughly $14 million BTC transfer from Tether to an exchange-linked wallet on Tuesday — another move that added to traders’ scanning for signs of selling. Market participants are increasingly sensitive to such flows as on-chain signals can presage liquidity events in thin or risk-off markets. Gemini news amid the market noise The wallet move comes as Gemini continues product expansion and sees positive regulatory developments. Last week the exchange rolled out “Command Center,” a Grok-powered feature for its prediction markets, which generates personalized feeds based on users’ positions and activity. Separately, a recent federal court filing showed the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission and Gemini jointly asked to remove a previously agreed $5 million settlement tied to a proposed Bitcoin futures contract; the CFTC said it would not have pursued the case under current enforcement standards. What to watch On-chain transfers to exchange hot wallets aren’t definitive proof of imminent selling, but they’re a common trigger for trader caution — especially during a market downturn. Traders and analysts will be watching Gemini-linked wallets, further transfers from major holders, and price action around the $66k–$68k area for clues about whether this move presages more selling or is a routine operational shift. Read more AI-generated news on: undefined/news