The corporate crypto-holding blueprint is buckling under fresh headwinds, with multiple outfits now valued below their underlying asset piles. A leading Ethereum-centric firm, ETHZilla, offloaded $40 million in ETH last week to back a share repurchase push, as its stock languished at a 30% discount to net asset value (NAV). This pivot from accumulation to liquidation spotlights a brewing distress signal across the board.
Over in Tokyo, Metaplanet—a BTC treasury trailblazer—saw its modified NAV (mNAV) ratio skid to 0.99 earlier this month, despite a 115.7% surge in Bitcoin-tied revenues for Q3. The firm has clawed back to 1.03 as of late October, but the breach was a red flag: its market cap briefly trailed the worth of its 30,823 BTC stash, valued at roughly $3.5 billion. Since June, shares have cratered nearly 70%, vaporizing the once-lofty premium baked into these strategies.
Fidelity’s latest scan reveals non-mining public entities clutching over 700,000 BTC and 3 million ETH—a hefty slice of supply that’s now a liability in this environment. With 26 of 168 such operators mired in NAV discounts, faith in leveraged crypto exposure via stocks is eroding fast, per K33 Research.
Post-drawdown data paints a stark stall: Corporate BTC scoops have flatlined near yearly troughs, with zero rebound firepower in sight, notes Coinbase’s institutional research lead. These balance-sheet behemoths usually act as volatility buffers, but their sidelining leaves floors exposed—especially as ETH demand hinges on a lone whale. ETHZilla’s fire sale, snapping up 600,000 shares for $12 million since October 24 under a $250 million mandate, flips the script from hoarding to self-preservation.
The operator plans to keep liquidating until the NAV gap closes, eyeing short squeezes by curbing borrowable floats. Broader trends? Over 228 public DATs (digital asset treasuries) have funneled $148 billion into crypto this year, but a 95% drop in accumulation since July signals caution overload.