UPDATE (16 July 2019, 14:51 UTC): A correction has been made to remove the suggestion that all of Binance’s stolen BTC has been moved into fiat. Many of the associated exchanges do not offer fiat pairs.

A new analysis by Coinfirm shows the movement of the bitcoin stolen from Binance into various wallets. The hack, which netted 7,000 BTC, happened on May 7, 2019 at 17:15:24 UTC and the hackers have been moving stolen bitcoin from wallet to wallet.

Now, however, Coinfirm has spotted some activity that suggests the hackers are moving their gains off of exchanges, potentially into other cryptocurrencies.

The first transaction happened here while other transactions followed. Most recently, however, it’s become clear that the hacker has begun liquidating the BTC on various exchanges.

“Analysis of one of the mainchains used by the hacker in layering stolen funds shows that they were able to liquidate at least 1.8087 BTC (21,000.00 USD) on the following exchanges,” said Coinfirm’s Grant Blaisdell. The transfers happened as follows:

Bitfinex: 0,7934 BTC Binance: 0,4294 BTC Bitmex: 0,0022 BTC KuCoin: 0,0713 BTC Kuna: 0,2482 BTC Bitmarket: 0,2560 BTC Crypterra: 0,0072 BTC Bitcoin.de: 0,0007 BTC WazirX: 0,0003 BTC

While caveats apply, it’s clear that the hacker moved an amount of BTC to each of these exchanges and there they either left the chain or remained dormant. This is obviously cold comfort to those who are watching their stolen crypto hop from exchange to exchange.

Hacker image via Shutterstock