March 31, 2026 ChainGPT

Corporate Bitcoin Buying Collapses 99.93% to $70K — Only 1 BTC Added Last Week

Corporate Bitcoin Buying Collapses 99.93% to $70K — Only 1 BTC Added Last Week
Corporate bitcoin buying all but disappeared last week, with net purchases by listed companies plunging 99.93% to just $70,000, SoSoValue data show. As of 8 a.m. ET on March 30, 2026, non‑mining publicly listed firms added a net 1 BTC over the week — one of the weakest weekly prints since SoSoValue began tracking corporate treasuries. The drop comes as spot prices trade sideways and ETF flows grow more erratic. Who bought (and who didn’t) - Strategy (the company formerly known as MicroStrategy), long a poster child for corporate bitcoin accumulation, “has not announced any Bitcoin purchases” for the week, SoSoValue notes. Strategy had at one point held more than 1% of total supply in its treasury. - Japanese firm Metaplanet recorded its 11th consecutive week without purchases after a period of smaller, regular buys in 2025. - The only listed company to add to its stack last week was UK‑based BHODL, which on March 26 announced a $72,832 purchase of 1 BTC — modest in isolation but notable in an otherwise barren week. Deals and dry powder - Two European firms signaled growth plans that rely on transactions or raised capital rather than immediate spot buying. Swedish health‑tech H100 said it intends to acquire Norway’s Moonshot AS and Never Say Die AS in an all‑stock deal that would boost its holdings to 3,501 BTC once closed. French asset manager Capital B completed a €2.8 million financing to fund future Bitcoin purchases. Bigger picture: corporates still significant, but mostly parked Despite the near‑zero weekly inflow, corporate treasuries remain a material holder of Bitcoin. SoSoValue calculates listed companies (excluding miners) now hold 1,023,333 BTC — roughly $6.939 billion, or about 5.1% of Bitcoin’s circulating market capitalization. That total rose by only 0.000098% from the prior week, underscoring how muted net accumulation has become. Why it matters Previous coverage highlighted companies using Bitcoin as a long‑term balance‑sheet hedge. But as ETF flows, macro data and regulatory headlines increasingly set the market’s tone, corporate buyers — even the most aggressive — are prone to step back when conditions tighten. This week’s 99.93% drop fits that pattern: with treasuries on pause, the next leg of Bitcoin’s move looks more dependent on ETF and retail demand than another MicroStrategy‑style corporate buying spree. Read more AI-generated news on: undefined/news