

The hunt for Satoshi Nakamoto lost market relevance after Strategy and Coinbase leaders said Bitcoin no longer depends on its creator’s identity. Their remarks followed renewed attention surrounding the documentary Finding Satoshi. Together, those signals recast the mystery as a historical question rather than a live market trigger.
Phong Le, chief executive at Strategy, said the subject now calls for humility and recognition of contribution, not exposure. Coinbase chief Brian Armstrong backed that view. He said Bitcoin’s code and economic model now stand on their own, regardless of who wrote it in 2008.
That position marks a break from years of attempts to pin the pseudonym on one person. The latest film instead points to Hal Finney and Len Sassaman as a joint possibility. Reports on the documentary said the case rests on patterns, timelines, and testimony, but not on cryptographic proof.
The theory also changes the market frame. Finney died in 2014, and Sassaman died in 2011.
For years, one major fear centered on wallets linked to Satoshi and the chance that roughly 1.1 million BTC could suddenly move. The Finney-Sassaman version softens that risk. In that reading, inaccessible keys turn a long-standing overhang into a fading tail risk.
At the same time, the ownership picture has changed. Strategy said on April 20 that it held 815,061 BTC. BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust held about 806,700 BTC this week, placing the two entities together in the same range as the founder’s estimated stash.
That shift helps explain why Bitcoin’s origin story carries less weight in trading and adoption debates. Large institutions now command balances that rival the founder’s estimated share. As a result, attention has moved toward liquidity, infrastructure, regulation, and capital flows rather than biography.
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Bitcoin’s structure also limits how far any identity theory can go. The network runs through code, signatures, and distributed consensus, not through a visible founder. That design has allowed Bitcoin to keep operating without any public return from Nakamoto since 2011.
New claims still surface, including fresh efforts to link Satoshi to Adam Back and other long-discussed candidates. Yet those claims keep producing media cycles without a final answer. None has delivered the one thing the market would treat as decisive: cryptographic proof from Satoshi-linked keys.
That is why the mystery remains open even as its market value fades. Competing theories continue to circulate, but Bitcoin does not wait for biographers to settle. The network keeps moving on verifiable signatures, while the search for a face behind the name keeps losing practical importance.
Bitcoin has moved beyond the question of Satoshi Nakamoto’s identity, as Strategy and Coinbase point to code, market structure, and institutional ownership as the bigger forces now. The main takeaway is clear: Bitcoin’s value and durability no longer depend on knowing who created it.