Corporate interest in Bitcoin exploded between June 9 and 13, as public filings reveal more than 60 separate announcements tied to the cryptocurrency.
In that brief window, companies snapped up roughly 2,500 BTC and laid groundwork for billions more.
Six firms—including newly formed American Bitcoin Corp—opened treasuries for the first time, collectively locking up 404 BTC. Another ten, among them Trump Media with a planned $2.3 billion deal, outlined forthcoming purchases.
Meanwhile, 23 established holders expanded their stacks; Strategy alone bought 1,045 BTC while closing a $979.7 million IPO. Smaller additions from names like Remxpoint and Cipher Mining rounded out the tally.
Looking ahead, nine businesses have signaled fresh buying plans that could funnel an additional $1.8 billion into Bitcoin. Financing moves at GameStop, Mélioz, and France’s Blockchain Group highlight how quickly corporate treasuries are pivoting toward BTC as a reserve asset.
The surge mirrors hefty inflows into Bitcoin ETFs and underscores a broader shift: more companies now treat the cryptocurrency as a core balance-sheet component rather than a speculative side bet.
Michael Saylor, co-founder of the company now called Strategy and one of Bitcoin’s most vocal champions, says the next great migration of wealth will happen on the Bitcoin network.
Bitcoin’s roller-coaster days may be fading, and that shift could push the world’s largest digital asset into more professional portfolios, according to Coatue Management founder Philippe Laffont.
Truth Social, Donald Trump’s social-media platform, has quietly lodged paperwork for a fund that would hold both Bitcoin and Ethereum—marking the first time a Trump-linked business has ventured into the U.S. crypto-ETF arena.
Michael Saylor’s Strategy has just added 10,100 BTC—worth about $1.05 billion—to its balance sheet, lifting the company’s total stash to roughly 592,100 coins.