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Do you know Martti Malmi? The Finnish developer is one of the earliest Bitcoin pioneers, who worked directly with Satoshi Nakamoto in 2009 and created the first Bitcoin GUI. His story is simultaneously fascinating and painful — at least from a financial perspective.
Martti Malmi accumulated about 55,000 Bitcoins through early mining. Back then, the money was worth — or rather, it wasn’t. In 2009, he sold 5,050 BTC for just $5.02, making it the first Bitcoin-to-fiat trade ever. A few years later, between 2012 and 2013, he sold all 55,000 Bitcoins for a total of around $300,000. The average price per coin was just a few dollars.
His reasoning was understandable: he wanted to buy a house and achieve financial security. At that time, he didn’t really believe Bitcoin would become so huge. Who could blame him? People thought it was an experiment.
But then it happened. In 2017, Bitcoin reached about $20,000 per coin — 55,000 BTC would have been worth $1.1 billion. In 2021, the price surged to nearly $69,000, valuing his coins at $3.8 billion. Today, in 2026, with current prices over $67,000, his holdings would still be worth several billion.
What does Martti Malmi do with this knowledge? He doesn’t regret it. Seriously. He publicly acknowledged that he “missed unimaginable wealth,” but instead of complaining, he said he’s proud to have helped Bitcoin succeed — regardless of his personal financial loss. That’s remarkable. While others in his position might be bitter, Martti Malmi remains focused on his legacy as a pioneer, not on what could have been.
That’s the kind of perspective rarely seen. Martti Malmi will be remembered as one of the most important early Bitcoin developers — and that might be more valuable than any dollar he could have earned.