Bitcoin Treasury Holdings Explode to $130B - Dominating Crypto Reserves by Nearly 4x Margin
Corporate treasuries are loading up on digital gold while leaving other cryptocurrencies in the dust.
The Bitcoin Supremacy Play
Bitcoin treasury holdings have smashed through the $130 billion barrier, establishing a commanding lead over other digital assets. The king cryptocurrency now holds nearly four times the value of all other crypto treasury holdings combined—a staggering dominance that's rewriting corporate balance sheet strategies worldwide.
While traditional finance executives still debate blockchain adoption, forward-thinking corporations are quietly building massive Bitcoin war chests. They're bypassing the regulatory uncertainty surrounding altcoins and betting big on the original cryptocurrency's staying power.
The numbers don't lie: $130 billion in Bitcoin versus roughly $35 billion across all other crypto assets. That's not just a preference—it's a wholesale endorsement of Bitcoin as the only digital asset mature enough for corporate treasury management. Because when you're playing with shareholder money, you don't gamble on meme coins and experimental protocols.
Wall Street analysts might still be scratching their heads, but the smart money has already voted with its wallet—and the results are overwhelmingly in Bitcoin's favor.
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SoFi wants access to more student loans
The government hasn't made a decision about whether to sell off some of the student loans it owns or to move away from issuing new loans. But SoFi CEO Anthony Noto said on the company's first-quarter earnings call back in April that if the government did so, SoFi WOULD be more than willing to step in and fill the gap. Noto said, "If the government backs away from providing in-school loans, Grad Plus, et cetera, et cetera, we'll absolutely capture that opportunity."
Noto added that if SoFi eventually were able to finance in-school loans -- and not just refinance loans -- it would be "a double bottom line from the standpoint that it's a revenue stream [on] day one, but it's also a member that becomes part of the ecosystem of SoFi." In short, the company could benefit from issuing the initial loan as well as when the borrower refinances.
Don't bet on this just yet
President Donald Trump explored the idea of offloading some federal student loans during his first term, only to eventually abandon the idea. It's entirely possible that the same could happen this time around.
What's more, there are no clear details about this potential move, so buying SoFi stock assuming that the company will benefit from any potential government decision is more than just a little premature. Instead, investors should keep a close eye on any new details that emerge and wait to see how it could benefit SoFi over the long term.