Just minutes after missiles hit Iranian soil on February 28, crypto trackers spotted big changes. Withdrawals from Iran’s top exchange, Nobitex, jumped by 873%. This was way more than normal ups and downs in the market.
At first, it looked like people in Iran were scared. They pulled their crypto from the exchange to safe personal wallets. Many called it a “digital bank run,” like when folks rush to grab cash from banks in a crisis.
But is it really that simple? Experts are split. Some say it’s users fleeing risk. Others think it’s the exchange doing routine safety steps. This debate shows how tricky it is to read crypto moves during tense times.
Blockchain tools like those from top firms watched every move. On that Saturday, around 10 a.m. local time, outflows exploded. Chainalysis flagged it as a huge red flag for possible capital flight.
Capital flight means people move money out of a country fast when things get unstable. In crypto, that often means shifting from exchanges to private wallets or sending abroad.
But one firm, TRM Labs, says don’t get fooled by the numbers. The 873% jump sounds scary, but the total cash moved was just a few million dollars. Iran’s crypto scene handles billions each year, so this is small.
Percentages without context can twist the truth. A small rise on a quiet day looks huge.
TRM checked the wallets closely. They saw signs of the exchange moving funds from “hot wallets” (online, easy to use) to “cold wallets” (offline, super safe). This is standard to dodge hackers.
Nobitex learned the hard way about risks. In June 2025, hackers linked to a pro-Israel group stole $90 million. They hit the hot wallets, leaked code, and even wrecked the stolen crypto so it could not be used.
After that, safety became top priority. With fresh airstrikes kicking off “Operation Epic Fury,” Nobitex likely rebalanced wallets to stay safe amid chaos.
This move fits perfect after a hack and during war risks. It’s not users panicking—it’s the exchange locking down.
TRM’s policy head Ari Redbord explained the real signs of capital flight:
Here, flows were short-lived and looked like internal shifts. Plus, Iran had internet blackouts. Most users couldn’t even log in to withdraw.
TRM admits some users might have moved funds, but it’s tiny and matches normal ops.
Not everyone agrees. Elliptic tracks steady flows from Nobitex to overseas wallets—about $1 million a day. Even with blackouts, it keeps going.
Elliptic’s Tom Robinson says it matches past blackouts. Volume drops, but outflows to foreign spots continue.
Outflows keep coming at low levels, just like in January’s blackout.
Chainalysis stays neutral. The spike hints at flight, but it’s too soon to split user moves from exchange actions.
Internet cuts are key. Big user panic needs online access. With much of Iran offline, mass withdrawals are tough.
No big clusters to personal wallets. No rush to known cash-out spots. This backs the “security move” view over panic.
Iran’s crypto economy is huge—$7.8 billion in shadow trades. The government uses it to dodge sanctions for global deals. Regular people see it as a way out of strict controls and bad money policies.
Crypto shines here:
In crises, crypto is a lifeline. But events like this spotlight it for regulators and watchers.
This case teaches big lessons:
Real-time reads are hard. Data is open, but meanings fight it out.
Watch for more flows. If outflows grow and spread to offshore hubs, it could signal real flight. Steady small moves might just be ops.
Nobitex will keep beefing security post-hack. Users in Iran stay glued to crypto as their best bet amid tensions.
Global eyes are on. Iran’s crypto role could shift with war heat. For investors, it’s a reminder: Check beyond headlines. Dive into wallet data.
The debate boils down to cashing out or locking down. Right now, evidence leans toward exchange smarts over user panic. But crypto’s wild—stay tuned.
In a world of sanctions and strikes, blockchain keeps proving its power. Transparent, borderless, resilient. That’s why millions turn to it, even in the toughest spots.
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