The Corporate Bitcoin Rush: How 228 Public Companies Built $148B in Digital Asset Treasuries
In January 2025, roughly 70 public companies held Bitcoin on their balance sheets. By October, that number had surged past 228. Collectively, these "Digital Asset Treasury" (DAT) companies now hold approximately $148 billion in Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies—a threefold increase in market capitalization from the $40 billion recorded just twelve months earlier.
This isn't speculation anymore. It's a structural shift in how corporations think about their balance sheets.
The numbers tell a story of accelerating institutional adoption: public companies now control 4.07% of all Bitcoin that will ever exist, up from 3.3% at the start of the year. Private businesses have pushed total corporate Bitcoin holdings to 6.2% of supply—a staggering 21x increase since January 2020. And $12.5 billion in new business Bitcoin inflows during just eight months of 2025 exceeded all of 2024's total.
But this gold rush has a darker side. Strategy's stock plummeted 52% from its peak. Semler Scientific dropped 74%. GameStop's Bitcoin pivot flopped. The "premium era is over," as one analyst put it. What's driving this corporate Bitcoin frenzy, who's winning, and who's getting crushed?
The New Rules of Corporate Finance
Two forces converged in 2025 to transform Bitcoin from a speculative curiosity into a legitimate corporate treasury asset: regulatory clarity and accounting reform.
FASB Changes Everything
For years, companies holding Bitcoin faced an accounting nightmare. Under the old rules, crypto assets were treated as indefinite-lived intangible assets—meaning companies could only record impairments (losses) but never recognize gains until they sold. A company that bought Bitcoin at $20,000 and watched it rise to $100,000 would still carry it at cost, but if the price dipped to $19,000 for even a moment, they'd have to write it down.
That changed on January 1, 2025, when FASB's ASU 2023-08 became mandatory for all calendar-year entities. The new standard requires companies to measure crypto assets at fair value each reporting period, reflecting both gains and losses in net income.
The impact was immediate. Tesla, which holds 11,509 BTC unchanged since early purchases, recorded a $600 million mark-to-market gain under the new rules. Companies that had been sitting on unrealized gains could finally report them. Bitcoin became a much cleaner asset for corporate balance sheets.
Regulatory Tailwinds
The GENIUS Act and CLARITY Act moving through Congress in 2025 provided something corporate treasurers had been waiting for: predictability. While neither bill has fully passed, the bipartisan momentum signaled that crypto wasn't going to be regulated out of existence.
For CFOs evaluating Bitcoin as a treasury asset, this regulatory trajectory matters more than any specific rule. The risk of holding an asset that might be banned or severely restricted dropped significantly. "Once Bitcoin rebounds," one analyst noted, "no CFO wants to be the one who ignored the cheapest balance-sheet trade of the cycle."
The Titans: Who Holds What
The corporate Bitcoin landscape is dominated by a handful of massive players, but the field is rapidly expanding.
Strategy: The $33 Billion Behemoth
Michael Saylor's company—now rebranded from MicroStrategy to simply "Strategy"—remains the undisputed king. As of January 2026, the firm holds 673,783 BTC acquired at an average price of $66,385, representing a total investment of $33.1 billion.
Strategy's "42/42 Plan" (originally the "21/21 Plan" before being doubled) targets $84 billion in capital raises through 2027—$42 billion in equity and $42 billion in fixed-income securities—to continue Bitcoin accumulation. In 2025 alone, they raised $6.8 billion through at-the-market programs and preferred stock offerings.
The scale is unprecedented. Strategy now controls approximately 3.2% of all Bitcoin that will ever exist. MSCI's decision to maintain the company's index status validated the "Digital Asset Treasury" model and made MSTR a primary vehicle for institutional Bitcoin exposure.
Marathon Digital: The Mining Powerhouse
MARA Holdings sits second with 46,376 BTC as of March 2025. Unlike Strategy, which simply buys Bitcoin, Marathon produces it through mining operations—giving the company a different cost basis and operational profile.
What sets MARA apart in 2025 is yield generation. The company began lending out portions of its holdings—7,377 BTC as of January 2025—to generate single-digit percentage returns. This addresses one of the key criticisms of corporate Bitcoin holdings: that they're dead assets producing no income.
Metaplanet: Asia's Biggest Bet
Tokyo-listed Metaplanet emerged as the breakout story of 2025. The company acquired 30,823 BTC valued at $2.7 billion by year-end, making it Asia's largest corporate Bitcoin holder and a global top-ten treasury.
Metaplanet's ambition extends further: 100,000 BTC by end of 2026 and 210,000 BTC by 2027—roughly 1% of total Bitcoin supply. The company represents the model going international, proving the Strategy playbook works beyond U.S. markets.
Twenty One Capital: The Tether-Backed Newcomer
Twenty One Capital launched as the "super newcomer" of 2025. This new entity went public through a SPAC merger with Cantor Equity Partners, backed by an unlikely coalition: Cantor Fitzgerald, Tether, SoftBank, and Bitfinex.
The initial raise brought $360 million and 42,000 BTC (valued at approximately $3.9 billion) onto the balance sheet. Tether contributed $160 million; SoftBank added $900 million; Bitfinex contributed $600 million. Twenty One represents the institutionalization of the DAT model—major financial players building purpose-built Bitcoin treasury vehicles.
The Newcomers: Mixed Results
Not every company riding the Bitcoin treasury wave found success.
GameStop: The Meme Stock Struggles Again
GameStop announced in March 2025 that it was issuing $1.3 billion in zero-coupon convertible bonds specifically for Bitcoin purchases. By May, the company had acquired 4,710 BTC.
The market reaction was brutal. Shares briefly jumped 7% on the announcement before crashing double digits. Three months later, the stock remained down over 13%. GameStop proved that a Bitcoin pivot couldn't cure fundamental business problems—and that investors could see through purely financial engineering.
Semler Scientific: From Hero to Acquisition
Semler Scientific, a healthcare technology company, saw its stock rise fivefold after announcing its Bitcoin treasury transformation in May 2024. By April 2025, the company planned to issue $500 million in securities explicitly for Bitcoin purchases.
But the 2025 downturn hit hard. Semler's stock dropped 74% from peak levels. In September 2025, Strive, Inc. announced an all-stock acquisition of Semler—a merger of two Bitcoin treasuries that looked less like expansion and more like consolidation of wounded players.
The Copycat Problem
"Not everyone can be Strategy," observed one analyst, "and there's no surefire formula that says a quick rebranding or merger plus adding bitcoin equals success."
Companies including Solarbank and ECD Automotive Design announced Bitcoin pivots hoping for stock pops. None materialized. The market began distinguishing between companies with genuine Bitcoin strategies and those using crypto as a PR tactic.
The Hidden Story: Small Business Adoption
While public company treasuries grab headlines, the real adoption story might be happening in private businesses.
According to the River Business Report 2025, small businesses are leading Bitcoin adoption: 75% of business Bitcoin users have fewer than 50 employees. These companies allocate a median 10% of net income to Bitcoin purchases.
The appeal for small businesses differs from public company motivations. Without access to sophisticated treasury management tools, Bitcoin offers a simple inflation hedge. Without public market scrutiny, they can hold through volatility without quarterly earnings pressure. Tax-loss harvesting strategies—selling at losses to offset gains, then immediately repurchasing (legal for Bitcoin but not stocks)—provide additional flexibility.
The Bear Case Emerges
The 2025 market correction exposed fundamental questions about the DAT model.
Leverage and Dilution
Strategy's model depends on continuously raising capital to buy more Bitcoin. When Bitcoin prices fall, the company's stock falls faster due to leverage effects. This creates pressure to issue more shares at lower prices—diluting existing shareholders to maintain the acquisition pace.
Since Bitcoin plummeted 30% from its October 2025 high, treasury companies entered what critics called a "death spiral." Strategy shares fell 52%. The premium investors paid for Bitcoin exposure through these stocks evaporated.
"The Premium Era Is Over"
"We're entering a phase where only disciplined structures and real business execution are going to survive," warned John Fakhoury of Stacking Sats. The structural weaknesses—leverage, dilution, and reliance on continuous capital raises—became impossible to ignore.
For companies with actual operating businesses, adding Bitcoin might enhance shareholder value. For companies whose entire thesis is Bitcoin accumulation, the model faces existential questions when Bitcoin prices decline.
What Comes Next
Despite the challenges, the trend isn't reversing. Bernstein analysts project public companies globally could allocate $330 billion to Bitcoin over the next five years. Standard Chartered expects this corporate treasury adoption to drive Bitcoin toward $200,000.
Several developments will shape 2026:
FASB Expansion
In August 2025, FASB added a research project on digital assets to "explore targeted improvements to the accounting for and disclosure of certain digital assets and related transactions." This signals potential further normalization of crypto assets in corporate accounting.
Global Tax Coordination
The OECD's Crypto-Asset Reporting Framework (CARF) now has 50 jurisdictions committed to implementation by 2027. This standardization of crypto tax reporting will make corporate Bitcoin holdings more administratively manageable across borders.
Yield Generation Models
MARA's lending program points toward the future. Companies are exploring ways to make Bitcoin holdings productive rather than simply sitting on cold storage. DeFi integration, institutional lending, and Bitcoin-backed financing will likely expand.
Strategic Reserve Implications
If governments begin holding Bitcoin as strategic reserves—a possibility that seemed absurd five years ago but is now actively discussed—corporate treasuries will face new competitive dynamics. Corporate and sovereign demand for a fixed-supply asset creates interesting game theory.
The Bottom Line
The corporate Bitcoin treasury movement of 2025 represents something genuinely new in financial history: hundreds of public companies betting their balance sheets on a 16-year-old digital asset with no cash flows, no earnings, and no yield.
Some will look brilliant—companies that accumulated at 2024-2025 prices and held through inevitable volatility. Others will look like cautionary tales—companies that used Bitcoin as a Hail Mary for failing businesses or leveraged themselves into insolvency.
The 228 public companies now holding $148 billion in crypto treasuries have made their bets. The regulatory framework is clarifying. The accounting rules finally work. The question isn't whether corporate Bitcoin adoption will continue—it's which companies will survive the volatility to benefit from it.
For builders and investors watching this space, the lesson is nuanced: Bitcoin as a treasury asset works for companies with genuine operational strengths and disciplined capital allocation. It's not a substitute for business fundamentals. The premium era may indeed be over, but the infrastructure era for corporate crypto has just begun.
This article is for educational purposes only and should not be considered financial advice. The author holds no positions in any companies mentioned.