Spanish Research Institution Plans to Sell Bitcoin Purchased for $10,000 in 2012, Now Worth Over $10 Million
BlockBeats News, November 6, according to Cointelegraph, a public research institution in Spain is preparing to sell its holdings of Bitcoin, currently worth over 10 million dollars, whereas these Bitcoins were initially purchased in 2012 as part of a blockchain research project for only 10,000 dollars.
According to the Spanish newspaper El Día, the Renewable Energy and Technology Institute (ITER), affiliated with the Tenerife Island Council, bought 97 Bitcoins over a decade ago for research into blockchain technology. The council is currently finalizing the plan to sell this holding.
Juan José Martínez, the Commissioner of Innovation Affairs of Tenerife, stated that the council is collaborating with a Spanish financial institution authorized by the Bank of Spain and the National Securities Market Commission to assist in completing this sale. Due to regulatory and volatility risks, most European banks still refuse to process Bitcoin transactions, making the process of selling Bitcoins by this research institution even more complex.
You may also like
Strategy Founder: The Next 10 Years of Bitcoin
Forbes Special Report: Stablecoin cross-border payments are faster now, but not cheaper yet
Li Feifei's latest long article: When video generation, robots, and NVIDIA all claim to be world models, we need a taxonomy
Blaming the desolation of the cryptocurrency world on the rise of AI is a form of intellectual laziness
The impact of OUSD on Circle, Tether, and Paxos: not a single negative factor, but a more complex reshaping of competition
A valuation of 8 billion dollars, doubling in 8 months! What makes the crypto-friendly bank Erebor Bank stand out?
340 billion valuation: Li Yanhong's largest IPO, a seat in Kunlunxin's shares is hard to come by
Stablecoins are the "royalists" of the crypto world: Open USD brings the old currency system into play
Cape Verde 2-3 Argentina: The Underdog Team That Stunned the World in Defeat
Cape Verde's run ended in a 3-2 defeat to Argentina, but their journey — three unbeaten draws, one heroic goalkeeper, and a fight that pushed the defending champions to the brink — is the kind of story markets recognize too: small caps can rattle blue chips long before anyone expects it.
Semiconductor stocks plummet, yet Anthropic wants to create a 2nm chip
Where is Zhao Changpeng's billion-dollar investment going? YZi Labs' investment landscape fully revealed
Ethereum Foundation Report: A Basic Guide to Ethereum for Governments and Financial Institutions
A pre-announced harvesting case: After the cryptocurrency price dropped by 99%, the public chain Saga exited to transform into AI
When American giants collectively "defect" from Chinese AI models
BIS Report Compliance Observation: The Real Risks of Stablecoins, Not Just "Depegging"
Portugal 2-1 Croatia: Ronaldo's 20-Year Knockout-Stage Drought Ends With a Debt Finally Collected
Portugal beat Croatia 2-1 in the 2026 global football championship's knockout rounds as Ronaldo scored his first-ever knockout-stage goal, Gonçalo Ramos struck a stoppage-time winner, and VAR ruled out a late equalizer for offside.

