Corporate Giants Hoard $100B in Bitcoin — Grabbing 4% of All BTC in Existence
Wall Street’s love affair with Bitcoin hits a new peak as publicly traded companies collectively stash over $100 billion worth of BTC. That’s enough to make Satoshi smirk—if he weren’t busy dodging tax authorities.
Who needs gold when you’ve got digital scarcity? The corporate treasury rush now locks down 4% of Bitcoin’s total supply, turning balance sheets into mini-ETF proxies. MicroStrategy’s not-so-micro bet started the trend, but now even legacy firms are FOMO-ing into crypto cold storage.
Meanwhile, traditional asset managers still can’t decide if Bitcoin’s a currency, commodity, or existential threat to their fees. The irony? These same institutions mocked crypto as ‘rat poison’—right before turning their vaults into rodent buffets.
Strategy leads with over 600,000 BTC
Michael Saylor’s Strategy (NASDAQ: MSTR) remains the undisputed, holding 601,550 BTC worth more than $71.5 billion—accounting for 2.86% of the total Bitcoin supply. Marathon Digital, XXII, Riot Platforms, and Metaplanet round out the top five, each holding between 16,000 and 50,000 BTC.
Metaplanet, often dubbed “Asia’s MicroStrategy,” has rapidly increased its BTC position, while other firms like Tesla, Coinbase, and Block continue to maintain sizable reserves as part of their long-term balance sheet strategies.
READ MORE:1 million BTC by year-end?
With current momentum accelerating, Bitcoin Magazine Pro poses the question: Could publicly listed firms collectively surpass 1 million BTC in holdings by the end of 2025? As more corporations seek hedges against fiat depreciation and regulatory clarity improves, such a milestone may be closer than expected.
The shift highlights Bitcoin’s transformation from a speculative asset to a Core strategic reserve. From tech giants to miners and FinTech innovators, public companies are increasingly treating Bitcoin as a financial backbone rather than a fringe experiment.
With over 4% of Bitcoin’s fixed 21 million supply now sitting in corporate treasuries, the trend suggests deepening institutional conviction—and growing scarcity for retail and late institutional adopters alike.