Nakamoto Holdings, a publicly traded Bitcoin‑treasury company that launched last August, is facing a deepening financial crisis after a dramatic stock collapse and a string of losses that have eroded investor confidence and raised the specter of delisting.
In less than a year, the company’s market capitalization has plunged from a peak near $24 billion to roughly $180 million — a decline of about 99.3% that has wiped out roughly $23.3 billion in value.
Heavy Q4 Mark‑downs
In its late‑Monday report, Nakamoto reported a $142.6 million loss in the fair value of its digital assets during the fourth quarter, alongside a $10.8 million investment loss tied to its stake in another Bitcoin‑treasury firm, Metaplanet.
The company said it entered 2025 with a mandate to build a public, Bitcoin‑native enterprise, completing its public listing via a merger with KindlyMD and expanding its footprint through acquisitions of BTC Inc and UTXO.
“We established a robust Bitcoin treasury, built a scalable capital strategy, and… transitioned into a fully integrated Bitcoin operating business with the scale and infrastructure to drive sustained growth,” CEO David Bailey said in the statement.
Despite that strategic framing, recent filings revealed more troubling operational details. Analysts at Bull Theory flagged the sale of $20 million worth of Bitcoin at an average sale price near $70,000 — assets the company had originally acquired at an average cost basis of $118,000.
That transaction crystallized a roughly 40% loss on those coins and underscored a central problem: Bitcoin is trading far below Nakamoto’s cost basis, shrinking the value of the company’s treasury while liabilities and financing structures remain in place.
Financing Fragility At Nakamoto
The company’s capital structure has also magnified its vulnerability. At launch, Nakamoto raised $510 million via a private investment in public equity (PIPE) and an additional $200 million in senior secured convertible notes.
In December 2025, the firm refinanced its convertible debt with a $210 million Bitcoin‑backed loan from crypto exchange Kraken. That loan is secured by the same Bitcoin that has since fallen to roughly 40% below Nakamoto’s purchase price, exposing the company to margin and solvency pressures if prices remain depressed.
With the stock price trading under $1 for more than 30 consecutive days, Nakamoto is now non‑compliant with Nasdaq listing rules. If the situation is not remedied, the company faces a probable delisting effective June 8, 2026.
The potential removal from the exchange would further constrict Nakamoto’s already limited access to capital and reduce liquidity for shareholders, creating a vicious cycle.
A weak stock price limits the company’s ability to raise equity to shore up its balance sheet or buy back discounted Bitcoin, which in turn undermines the principal advantage of the treasury‑model business that Nakamoto has pursued.
Bull Theory’s analysts summarized the predicament bluntly: the Bitcoin treasury model depends on three things lining up — a sufficiently low cost basis for BTC, a strong stock price that enables capital raises, and continuous access to financing.
If any one of these elements breaks, the model can rapidly unwind. At Nakamoto, all three have deteriorated: Bitcoin is trading well below the firm’s acquisition cost, the equity value has collapsed, and access to fresh capital has become effectively unavailable amid delisting risk.
Featured image from OpenArt, chart from TradingView.com






