Joseph Lubin-Linked Wallet Moves 80,001 ETH As Ethereum Selloff Deepens
A wallet linked to Ethereum co-founder Joseph Lubin has moved 80,001 ETH after more than three years of inactivity, adding fresh fear to an Ethereum market already under heavy pressure.
The wallet movement was valued around $121.6 million when first flagged, based on ETH prices near the low-$1,500 area. At the latest market check, ETH was trading closer to $1,570, putting the same 80,001 ETH above $126 million.
The address linked in the onchain alert, 0x1b3cB81E51011b549d78bf720b0d924ac763A7C2, still held about 133,299 ETH after several large outbound transfers. The initial alert focused on 80,001 ETH, while later onchain activity showed additional large movement from the same wallet.
The important point is what the transfer does not prove. A large ETH move from a dormant wallet does not automatically mean a sale. The coins could be moving for custody, collateral, treasury management, OTC preparation, internal wallet restructuring or exchange-related activity. No public statement from Lubin has confirmed the purpose of the transfer.
Timing Fuels Ethereum FUD
The transfer hit while ETH was already trading through a risky zone.
Ethereum recently fell below $1,550 as leveraged positions across DeFi came under pressure. The same market slide put hundreds of millions in ETH collateral at risk across lending protocols, with liquidation clusters building around Aave, Maker and other major venues.
That backdrop explains why the Lubin-linked wallet immediately drew attention. In a strong market, a large founder-linked transfer might be treated as treasury movement. In a weak market, every old wallet movement becomes a potential sell-pressure headline.
The fear is also psychological. Lubin is not an ordinary ETH holder. As an Ethereum co-founder and Consensys founder, any large movement tied to his wallet can influence sentiment, especially when traders are already questioning whether Ethereum has lost key support.
$1,000 ETH Calls Return
The wallet move also landed as analysts turned more bearish on Ethereum’s chart.
Ali Martinez said ETH had already hit his first bearish target near $1,560 and pointed to a deeper level near $1,000 if the breakdown continues. Rekt Capital also warned that Ethereum had broken below its multi-year uptrend line, putting the market at risk of a larger downside move if the breakdown holds on higher time frames.
Those calls do not guarantee a crash, but they show where market attention has shifted. ETH is no longer trading as if the $1,500 area is safe support. It is trading as if every bounce must prove itself quickly before another liquidation wave or wallet movement resets sentiment.
The same weakness is spreading through derivatives. High-leverage ETH positions have already been punished, including another major Hyperliquid liquidation tied to Machi Big Brother. Spot weakness, DeFi collateral stress and perp liquidations are now feeding the same ETH narrative.
No Dump Confirmed Yet
The market reaction is understandable, but the verified facts remain narrower than the speculation.
A dormant wallet linked to Lubin moved a large amount of ETH. The transfer occurred during a sharp Ethereum drawdown. Analysts are warning about deeper downside levels. That combination created FUD quickly.
What remains unconfirmed is the motive. There is no verified evidence that the ETH has been sold into the market, and the movement alone does not prove that Lubin is abandoning Ethereum or preparing a dump. If the coins move to an exchange, OTC desk or known market-making address, the pressure will become more serious. If they remain in fresh wallets or move into collateral structures, the story may become less about selling and more about liquidity management.
For now, ETH traders are watching two things at once: whether the Lubin-linked coins continue moving toward market-facing infrastructure, and whether Ethereum can reclaim the $1,600 area before the $1,500 breakdown turns into a deeper test of $1,426, $1,360 and the widely discussed $1,000 zone.




Post Comment
You must be logged in to post a comment.