#BTCReserveStrategy
Businesses and governments are increasingly adopting Bitcoin as a strategic treasury asset. Here's an updated snapshot:
MicroStrategy (now “Strategy”) holds ~628,791 BTC (~3% of all BTC), adding 21,000 BTC in late July across $2.46B acquisitions averaging ~$117K per coin. Their Q2 profit swung positive thanks to $14B in unrealized gains.
Capital B (Euronext-listed ALTBG) raised €10.3M to acquire 120 BTC as part of a long-term Bitcoin strategy, leveraging MiCA-driven regulatory clarity in Europe.
Canaan Inc., a crypto-mining hardware firm, now holds 1,484 BTC as of June 30, 2025. Its newly adopted crypto policy emphasizes long-term BTC storage from mining operations and equipment sales.
In Japan, Metaplanet Inc. follows the “Bitcoin‑first” model and currently holds over 16,300 BTC, positioning itself as an Asian analogue to MicroStrategy.
Moreover, at the state and federal level, the U.S. established a Strategic Bitcoin Reserve (SBR) via executive order on March 6, 2025. This reserve consolidates forfeited BTC estimated around 200K BTC and mandates a holding-only policy without sales. Texas followed suit, passing legislation in June 2025 to enable a state-level Bitcoin reserve fund.
Collectively, corporations now hold roughly 3.2% of all Bitcoin supply, reflecting growing institutional allocation trends.
What this means:
Corporations use BTC reserves to hedge inflation, strengthen balance sheets, and provide exposure through preferred stock and convertible financing.
Sovereign reserves (in the U.S. and states like Texas) institutionalize Bitcoin as a non‑speculative asset.
Regulatory clarity (e.g. MiCA in Europe) continues to unlock institutional adoption.