Remember when every company wanted to be the next Michael Saylor, loading up their corporate treasuries with Bitcoin (BTC) and calling it innovation? That strategy is looking considerably less brilliant these days.
The Rise and Fall of Digital Asset Treasuries
Public companies that embraced digital asset treasuries (DATs) in early 2025 enjoyed a spectacular run. Take SharpLink Gaming Inc., which announced plans to accumulate Ethereum tokens and watched its stock explode over 2,600%. Investors loved it. Until they didn't.
That same stock has since collapsed 86% from its peak, leaving the company valued at less than the digital tokens it actually holds. Let that sink in: the market is saying the company itself has negative value once you subtract the crypto.
According to Bloomberg, the median stock price for US and Canadian companies that pivoted to crypto treasury strategies has dropped 43% this year. The worst casualties? Companies that bet on smaller, more volatile tokens rather than sticking with Bitcoin.
The Yield Problem Nobody Talked About
Here's the issue that's become painfully obvious: cryptocurrencies just sit there. They don't generate dividends. They don't produce cash flow. As B. Riley Securities Analyst Fedor Shabalin explained, "Investors took a look and understood that there's not much yield from these holdings rather than just sitting on this pile of money, and that's why they contracted."
This becomes a real problem when you've borrowed money to buy these assets. Many companies issued debt to fund their crypto purchases, and now they're struggling to make interest and dividend payments while their holdings produce exactly zero dollars in income. Investor enthusiasm has predictably evaporated, and capital raising opportunities have dried up.
What Comes Next
The situation highlights the fundamental risk of converting corporate treasuries into highly volatile assets without income generation. Companies that chased the early success stories are now confronting a brutal market reality.
Interestingly, some surviving DATs are considering acquisitions of smaller crypto treasury companies trading below their asset values. So there's apparently still some belief in the long-term potential of this strategy, even as the immediate outlook remains decidedly grim for firms caught in the downturn.