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Kwasi Kwarteng is focused, ‘orange pilled’ and ready to start bitcoinmaxxing
Remarkable:
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Top-ticking may be the talent of Kwasi Kwarteng, the 38-day chancellor behind Britain’s 2022 ‘mini-Budget’ and related kerfuffles.
We wrote about the former MP’s pivot to bitcoin — which he formerly called “a total crapshoot” — in November, when something called ‘Stack Bitcoin Treasury’ announced him as a non-executive director. Here’s MainFT from then:
As Bryce noted at the time, an announcement of Kwarteng’s job had actually broken a couple of weeks earlier, to extremely little fanfare. Two months into 2026, how are things progressing?
Stack BTC, as it is known, registered its website on October 6th. It was, with retrospect, not the most auspicious timing:
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Now of course, 1 BTC = 1 BTC, so really nothing much has been lost. And the cryptocurrency’s roughly 45 per cent drop since then may not matter hugely to the Aquis-listed, burger-joint-branded Stack, which seemingly has no bitcoin anyway:
Stack’s website, screenshotted on Thursday
Stack exists across two entities. The first is StackBitcoinTreasury Ltd, a company formerly known as StackBTC Ltd, and before that . . . also StackBitcoinTreasury Ltd. As Alphaville noted in November:
The second entity is Stack BTC PLC, which was also formerly know as StackBitcoinTreasury PLC, and previously Kasei Digital Assets Plc, and even more previously Kasei Holdings PLC.
In case you’re confused, here how that looks on a truncated timeline:
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Let’s focus on the Aquis-listed PLC, where Kwarteng* and Withers are listed as ✨verified✨ directors…
. . . alongside two other humans and one advisory firm acting as a secretary.
The history of Kasei-cum-Stack is moderately lively. The group’s first accounts describe it as a “digital asset and Web 3.0 investment company established in July 2021 to provide investors with broad based exposure to the digital asset ecosystem”. Its first year included reportedly getting out of Terra/Luna just in time, and avoiding any major trouble from the FTX implosion.
As of October 2021, here’s what the group held:
By July 2022 (amid a crypto winter), it held just under 1.5mn in crypto assets (the bulk of its intangible assets), after about 1mn of disposals and a roughly 1.5mn negative revaluation. That number hadn’t changed much a year later, but it soared in 2024 as ETF approvals and all that jazz sent bitcoin on a tear:
Despite this jump, the company was struggling to scale up. Simply holding some volatile assets wasn’t a good enough raison d’être, and its lack of spark was reflected in a pretty rubbish performances for its shares, which traded well below its NAV:
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In January last year, it announced a strategic review:
They added “There is no certainty of a particular course of action at this stage”, and provided an updated valuation of their crypto pile, now valued (in dollars) at just north of $5mn:
A few months later, the company announced the review was completed, and that it was would pull the plug by the end of September 2025:
But in the immediate aftermath of that announcement, something started happening. Just a few weeks later, the company said:
Things were ostensibly still progressing in early November, but by the 20th — a couple of weeks after news of Kwarteng’s crypto pivot was reported by the FT — Kasei sent Kwarteng a letter of appointment, bringing him on board as an unsalaried non-executive director, expected to work a minimum of two days a month.
That same day, the company officially pivoted, adopting its new name and announcing “a modified strategy focused on becoming a listed investment vehicle with a primary focus on Bitcoin” following an agreement with some new investors including Kwarteng and Withers.
It announced it would return $3.4mn to shareholders by late January, raised through the sale of its cryptoassets, topped up by a £100k sweetener raised from the new investors. It new plan was to do . . . what every other bitcoin treasury company was already doing:
Kwarteng was announced as executive chair under the reconstituted company, with chief investment officer Jai Patel (who has been part of Kasei from the outset) becoming chief executive. In its accounts for the year to July — released in December — the company said it “is excited to embark on this new journey in what continues to be a dynamic industry”.
As so last month, following some AGM engineering and a recapitalisation, Stack BTC was born from the ashes of Kasei.
The launch was supported by a £200k fundraising: half of that went on the sweetener mentioned above, with the rest retained as working capital to “provide the Company with short-term operational capital to support its continued AQSE listing and initial execution of its revised strategy”.
Earlier this month, it added to that war chest, raising a further £6,000 from a single investor. There’s sometimes a debate over whether the plural of bitcoin is “bitcoin” or “bitcoins”. Stack may not need to worry about that just yet.
We emailed Stack CEO Patel to get an update on when the group might start actually stacking — and if they were worried about the recent bitcoin price plunge. He told us over email to expect more news possibly “as early as next week”, adding:
While we await this undertaking of great advantage, we thought readers might enjoy this exchange last week, between Kwarteng and Alphaville alumna Jemima Kelly:
*Companies House is in many ways genuinely great but in a predictable twist even the former Chancellor of the Exchequer has multiple profiles.
Further reading:
— What Kwasi Kwarteng knows now