Key Takeaways:
- Bitcoin trades near Germany's 2024 average sell price of ~$62,000
- Berlin sold 49,858 seized BTC in 2024, now worth over $3.2 billion
- Debate reignites over whether sovereign BTC sales were premature
Key Takeaways:

Bitcoin traded at $65,200 as of 10:00 UTC on June 27, less than $3,000 above the average price at which Germany sold 49,858 seized coins in 2024, reviving debate over one of the most criticized sovereign crypto dispositions in history.
"The German government sold at exactly the wrong moment, near local lows, and now the optics are impossible to ignore," said Nina Volkov, crypto macro analyst at Edgen. "A sovereign buying back coins it previously dumped would be unprecedented — but so was selling nearly 50,000 BTC through OTC desks in two weeks."
Germany's Bundeskriminalamt (BKA) seized 49,858 BTC from Movie2k, a piracy website, and sold the entire stack between June 19 and July 12, 2024, at an average price near $62,000, according to Arkham Intelligence data. At current prices, that hoard would be worth approximately $3.25 billion — roughly $1.1 billion more than what Germany received at the time of sale. The sell-off contributed to a 15% drawdown in Bitcoin during that period, with daily OTC flows exceeding $300 million at the peak.
The narrowing gap between Bitcoin's current price and Germany's average sale price creates a psychological reference level on the chart. A decisive break above the $62,000-$65,000 zone could reframe the narrative from "Germany sold the top" to "Germany sold the bottom" — potentially fueling calls for sovereign Bitcoin accumulation ahead of the next halving in April 2028.
A Sovereign Sale Under Scrutiny
The 2024 German sale remains a case study in how governments handle seized crypto assets. Unlike the US Marshals Service, which has auctioned seized Bitcoin in tranches over years to minimize market impact, the BKA liquidated its entire position through OTC desks in under four weeks. The sale drew criticism from Bitcoin advocates who argued that a staggered disposition or holding strategy would have maximized taxpayer returns.
At the time, Germany's move was part of a broader wave of government Bitcoin sales. The US government sold 69,370 BTC seized from Silk Road in 2023 and 2024, while China has periodically liquidated seized positions. Combined sovereign sales in 2024 totaled more than 120,000 BTC, according to CryptoQuant data.
What a Buyback Would Mean
A German buyback of 49,858 BTC at current prices would cost approximately $3.25 billion — a fraction of Germany's annual federal budget of roughly $480 billion. While no official proposal exists, the idea has gained traction among crypto proponents on social media as Bitcoin's price approaches the 2024 sale level.
"If Germany bought back even half of what it sold, it would send a powerful signal to other sovereigns," Volkov said. "But the political will for such a move is close to zero. No finance ministry wants to explain to taxpayers why it's buying volatile assets after already selling them."
Bitcoin has fallen 48% from its October 2025 all-time high of $126,000, compared with 64% losses in 2022 and 73% in 2018 during prior cycle troughs. The next halving is scheduled for April 2028.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.