Crypto's Hottest New Trend: Publicly Traded Companies Buying Bunches of Bitcoin
- Publicly traded companies like MicroStrategy and President Trump's media firm announced multi-billion dollar plans to raise funds for bitcoin purchases in 2025.
- This buying trend follows MicroStrategy’s initial bitcoin acquisitions using reserve cash in 2020 and growing investor interest due to restrictions on direct bitcoin purchases.
- MicroStrategy holds 582,000 bitcoins—nearly 3% of supply—and has seen its stock price rise over 3000% in five years, while other firms saw sharp stock gains from crypto treasury announcements.
- Bitcoin has traded in a range between $100,000 and $108,000 for several weeks, nearing its record peak of $111,814; however, experts suggest that new driving factors are needed to push the price significantly higher.
- Increased corporate adoption supports bitcoin's liquidity removal and price support but raises warnings that price declines could trigger large selloffs by newer treasury companies.
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JZXN raises funds through convertible bonds to acquire Bitcoin, initiating a strategy of placing thousands of Bitcoins
3 Reasons the Bitcoin Price Is Stuck, Despite the Surge in Treasury Companies
Over the past few weeks, the crypto world has been buzzing with announcements from a new breed of publicly traded companies — crypto treasury firms. These businesses exist primarily to raise capital and buy crypto, largely Bitcoin, for their balance sheets. Since the start of April, they’ve collectively raised an estimated $11.3 billion, with the bulk earmarked for Bitcoin. Hype for crypto’s newest fad is reaching a fever pitch, but curiously, t…

Crypto’s hottest new trend: publicly traded companies buying bunches of bitcoin
It’s one of crypto’s hottest trends: publicly traded companies buying bitcoin and then buying more.
The Bitcoin Treasury Strategy That’s Reanimating Zombie Companies
A growing number of public companies are stuck in limbo—technically solvent, but strategically stalled. Growth has evaporated. Stock prices have languished. Reinvestment opportunities are unclear or underwhelming. These companies aren’t broken—they’re just drifting. They’ve become what markets call zombie companies: firms that generate enough to survive, but not enough to excite. And in today’s capital environment, stagnation is no longer neutra…
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