
Strive Asset Management has raced from zero to 14,557 BTC in months, becoming the 9th‑largest public Bitcoin treasury and turning its balance sheet into a levered bet on BTC.
Summary
- Strive Asset Management has boosted its Bitcoin treasury to 14,557 BTC, making it the 9th-largest public corporate holder of the asset.
- The firm has scaled from zero BTC in late 2025 to a billion‑dollar balance sheet in months, using equity and preferred stock issuance to fund accumulation.
- The move is intensifying debate over public‑company treasury strategies and the emerging “race to accumulate” among non‑crypto‑native corporates.
Strive Asset Management has added another 789 BTC to its balance sheet, lifting its total holdings to 14,557 BTC and pushing it into 9th place among public Bitcoin treasury companies, according to data highlighted by Cointelegraph and BTCtreasuries. The Nasdaq‑listed asset manager, which describes itself as “a Bitcoin treasury asset management firm,” now sits in the same league as miners and software firms that have spent years converting their treasuries into digital assets.
From zero BTC to a top‑10 treasury in months
Strive’s rise into the top tier of corporate holders has been rapid. In January, the company disclosed it had acquired 333.89 BTC at an average price of about $89,851, bringing its stash to 13,131.82 BTC after financing a $225 million preferred equity raise and using proceeds to pay down debt tied to its acquisition of medical‑tech firm Semler Scientific.
“Strive also announced it has acquired 333.89 bitcoin at an average price of $89,851 and now holds 13,131.82 bitcoin,” the firm said in a January update, adding that this made it “the tenth largest public corporate holder of bitcoin globally.”
Chief investment officer Ben Werkman underscored the pace of the pivot, saying that “in just over four months, Strive has scaled from zero bitcoin to become a top‑10 publicly traded holder,” while emphasizing that long‑duration preferred equity better matches “long‑duration bitcoin exposure” than traditional debt.
Subsequent purchases — including a 113 BTC buy at an average price of about $68,584 and further acquisitions tracked by CryptoRank and Bitcoin Magazine — have lifted Strive’s holdings to 14,557 BTC, vaulting it to 9th place in the latest treasuries tables. BitcoinTreasuries data show public companies collectively hold more than 1.18 million BTC, with Strategy, Twenty One Capital and several miners still ahead of Strive on absolute balances.
Corporate treasury strategy debate heats up
Unlike pure‑play crypto firms, Strive positions itself as an asset manager whose “hurdle rate” for shareholder value is measured in BTC per share, effectively treating Bitcoin as both reserve asset and performance benchmark. A recent Intellectia.ai note described Strive as “the first publicly traded Bitcoin treasury asset management firm,” highlighting that with roughly $143.4 million in cash and equivalents plus digital assets, the company can cover “over 19 years of SATA interest payments,” giving it room to keep accumulating.
This hybrid profile — part asset manager, part balance‑sheet accumulator — is fueling broader discussion about how far non‑crypto‑native corporates should go in emulating Strategy‑style treasury strategies. With public treasuries already sitting on more than $9 billion worth of BTC and new entrants like Strive climbing the rankings, the race to accumulate is no longer limited to miners and software vendors, but increasingly involves financial firms whose core business lies outside of Bitcoin itself.







