TLDR:
- 37 of top 100 Bitcoin treasury companies trade below net asset value, representing nearly 40% of sector
- Strategy, the sector pioneer, now trades at 17% discount after previously commanding double premiums
- Companies below NAV cannot raise capital without destroying shareholder value, breaking growth model
- Industry consolidation expected as Alex Kruger compares situation to Grayscale Trust collapse in 2020
Bitcoin treasury companies are experiencing mounting pressure as roughly 40% now trade below their holdings’ net asset value.
Data from BitcoinTreasuries.net reveals that 37 of the top 100 firms trade at discounts to their Bitcoin reserves. This shift marks a dramatic reversal from earlier trading patterns.
The trend threatens the fundamental business model that drove the sector’s explosive growth throughout most of last year.
Business Model Breaks Down Under Discount Pressure
The treasury strategy depends entirely on maintaining premium valuations above Bitcoin holdings. Companies previously issued new stock above their cryptocurrency value to purchase additional coins.
This cycle allowed continuous expansion without diluting existing shareholders. However, the system collapses when shares trade below the underlying asset value.
Strategy, the sector’s pioneer, now trades at approximately a 17% discount to its Bitcoin holdings. The company previously commanded premiums exceeding double its cryptocurrency value.
Twenty One Capital, another major player among the top five treasuries, faces similar discount levels. Meanwhile, smaller operations suffer more severe markdowns.
Brian Huang, co-founder of investment platform Glider, confirmed the initial enthusiasm has faded. Nearly 200 public companies collectively hold over 1 million Bitcoin worth around $96 billion. Many firms entered the space without previous cryptocurrency connections. The rush to replicate the treasury model created substantial market saturation.
Companies trading below net asset value cannot raise equity capital without destroying shareholder value. For instance, a treasury holding $100 million in Bitcoin but trading at 30% discount has a $70 million market cap.
Issuing $10 million in new shares increases Bitcoin holdings to $110 million but only raises market value to $77 million. This mathematical reality eliminates the expansion mechanism entirely.
Industry Consolidation Expected After Grayscale-Style Collapse
Macro analyst Alex Kruger draws comparisons to the Grayscale Bitcoin Trust situation from December 2020. The trust traded at 40% premiums before Bitcoin exchange-traded funds emerged.
Investors paid $1.40 for every dollar of Bitcoin exposure through Grayscale. Subsequently, the product collapsed to 50% discounts as alternatives became available.
Kruger describes the current treasury model as unsustainable given the structural problems. Katherine Dowling, president of Bitcoin Standard Treasury Company, predicts stronger treasuries will acquire weaker competitors.
Consolidation appears inevitable as companies struggle below parity valuations. Strive’s September acquisition of Semler Scientific in an all-stock deal provides a precedent.
Performance data reinforces the deteriorating outlook for Bitcoin treasury companies. Only France’s The Blockchain Group outperformed the S&P 500’s 16% return last year.
Every other treasury underperformed the benchmark index. Additionally, 60% of treasuries paid more for their Bitcoin than current market values.
The discount range varies widely across the sector. Sweden-based H100 Group trades at 32% below net asset value. Vanadi Coffee faces a 61% discount to its holdings.
Brazil-based OranjeBTC hovers at parity, vulnerable to further equity drawdowns. These companies represent potential acquisition targets as consolidation accelerates.
The post Bitcoin Treasury Companies in Crisis: 40% Now Trade Below Net Asset Value appeared first on Blockonomi.
Source: https://blockonomi.com/bitcoin-treasury-companies-in-crisis-40-now-trade-below-net-asset-value/