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Bitcoin$62,480.86 is trading as a mature macro asset in 2026, but April 5 still belongs to its ghost founder. The network is marking what would be Satoshi Nakamoto's 51st birthday, a date pulled from the birthday listed on Satoshi's old P2P Foundation profile: April 5, 1975. [1]

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Why April 5 matters to Bitcoiners

The birthday itself has never been verified. It comes from a profile Satoshi used in the early Bitcoin$62,480.86 era, and like almost everything tied to Nakamoto's identity, it may have been deliberate misdirection. Still, the date has become a ritual checkpoint for the market, part meme, part history lesson, part reminder that Bitcoin's creator disappeared without cashing out the origin story. [2]
April 5 also carries symbolic weight. Historians of the ecosystem have long pointed out that April 5, 1933 was the date of Executive Order 6102, the U.S. directive that forced Americans to turn in much of their gold. Whether Satoshi chose April 5, 1975 as a nod to that event remains unproven, but the parallel fits Bitcoin's design ethos: hard money, self-custody, and skepticism toward state control of monetary systems. [3]

The receipts behind the myth

Satoshi's P2P Foundation profile listed the birthplace as Japan and the birth date as April 5, 1975. Neither detail lines up cleanly with the available evidence. Satoshi wrote in fluent native-level English, posted at hours that led many researchers to suspect a UK or North American time zone, and referenced cultural details that made the "Japanese male coder" narrative look thin. [2]

That mismatch is exactly why the birthday persists as signal rather than fact. It tells crypto culture less about who Satoshi is and more about how carefully the persona was constructed. Even the name "Satoshi Nakamoto" may be a mask built to keep attention on the protocol, not the founder.

A founder who left the keys untouched

The real market significance is not the birthday, but the wallet history attached to the myth. Satoshi is widely believed to control roughly 1 million BTC mined in Bitcoin$62,480.86's earliest stretch. Those coins have never meaningfully moved, a fact that still shapes market psychology because it removes one of the largest possible overhangs from active supply. [4]
That dormant stash is part of why Satoshi's legend remains unusually credible in crypto. No token unlock, no foundation treasury dump, no founder liquidity event. In a sector trained to watch insider wallets, Bitcoin's anonymous creator leaving the bags untouched remains one of the cleanest alignment signals in the industry.

Why it still resonates

Fifteen plus years after the white paper, Bitcoin no longer needs founder appearances, roadmap calls, or personality-driven marketing. That is the point. Every April 5, the market briefly looks back at the anonymous architect and then returns to what actually matters: blocks keep coming, supply stays fixed, and the network runs without him.

For an industry crowded with visible founders and very public blowups, Satoshi's absence is still the strongest part of the brand.