Crypto World
Crypto PAC spends $500K in support of Indiana candidate ahead of primary
Defend American Jobs, the cryptocurrency-backed political action committee (PAC) affiliated with Fairshake, reported spending more than $500,000 on media to support a Republican incumbent representative in Indiana.
According to a Saturday filing with the US Federal Election Commission (FEC), the Defend American Jobs PAC spent about $514,000 on media in support of James Baird, a Republican House member running for reelection in Indiana’s 4th Congressional District. The spending was the latest in Fairshake’s spending on the 2026 US elections ahead of today’s Indiana primary elections.

Source: FEC
Baird, who assumed office in January 2019, voted in favor of the GENIUS Act, the stablecoin payments bill, and the CLARITY Act, legislation aimed at creating digital asset market structure that has been stalled in the US Senate for months.
The Coinbase-aligned digital asset advocacy organization Stand With Crypto rated the Republican as “strongly supports crypto.”
Fairshake and its affiliates, Defend American Jobs and Protect Progress, are expected to spend millions of dollars in support of candidates they consider “pro-crypto” in this year’s US midterm elections.
In 2024, the PAC reported more than $130 million in expenditures for media supporting such candidates, including $40 million for Ohio’s US Senate race, in which voters rejected three-term Democratic incumbent Sherrod Brown. He is running this year to unseat Senator Jon Husted, a Republican appointed to fill Vice President JD Vance’s old seat.
Related: Americans distrust crypto, AI as industry super PACs flood midterms, poll finds
Today’s Indiana primary pits Baird against Indiana state representative Craig Haggard. Fairshake‘s backers include crypto companies Coinbase and Ripple Labs. Cointelegraph requested a comment from Fairshake but did not receive an immediate response.
Six months until US midterms with crypto bill hanging in the balance
All 435 seats in the US House of Representatives and 33 seats in the US Senate are up for grabs in the November’s midterm elections, with money from crypto lobbyists and PACs expected to potentially influence voters.
Fairshake reported holding $193 million in its coffers as of January, and said it will “oppose anti-crypto politicians and support pro-crypto leaders” in 2026. The PAC has already spent about $8.6 million in Illinois races for the state‘s governor and Senate and House members, and more than $1 million in Texas races.
The spending reports come as the US Senate is expected to schedule a markup on the CLARITY Act. The digital asset market structure legislation, passed by the House in July 2025, has been stalled in the Senate for months largely over concerns on ethics and stablecoin yield, but may be progressing after lawmakers announced a compromise last week.
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Crypto World
Ripple CEO Says Market Structure Bill Not a ‘Done Deal,’ Despite Stablecoin Compromise
Brad Garlinghouse, CEO of Ripple Labs, warned Tuesday that recent progress on the digital asset market structure bill in the US Senate did not guarantee success for the legislation, speculating that the next two weeks would be crucial.
Speaking at the Consensus crypto conference in Miami, Garlinghouse said that the likelihood of the market structure bill, the CLARITY Act, passing would “drop precipitously” if not addressed in the next two weeks. According to the Ripple CEO, the bill would be “too much of a loaded issue” amid campaigns for the 2026 US midterms, with primaries ongoing until the November elections.
“Do I think it’s perfect? Hell no,“ said Garlinghouse, referring to CLARITY. “I challenge you to show me any piece of legislation that we would call perfect. There’s tradeoffs and compromises, but I do think clarity is better than chaos.”

Source: Cointelegraph
The CEO’s remarks came after US Senators Thom Tillis and Angela Alsobrooks announced a compromise on stablecoin yield last week that could lead to the advancement of the CLARITY Act. Addressing stablecoins, as well as tokenized equities and ethics, has been one of the factors holding up the bill in the Senate since it was passed by the US House of Representatives in July 2025.
Related: Crypto PAC spends $500K in support of Indiana candidate ahead of primary
The CLARITY Act, already advanced by the Senate Agriculture Committee in a January markup, also requires approval by the Senate Banking Committee before a vote in the full chamber. Garlinghouse and Ripple executives have been part of negotiations on the CLARITY Act between White House officials and representatives of the crypto and banking industries.
“The Clarity Act is not a future priority; it is the priority,” said Senator Cynthia Lummis, a member of the banking committee, in a Tuesday X post. “Every corner of the industry is operating under legal uncertainty that Congress has the power to fix. The Senate needs to act.”
US financial agencies already moving forward without Congress
The US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) signed a memorandum of understanding in March to coordinate their approach to oversight of the digital asset market structure. SEC Chair Paul Atkins said that the agency‘s approach to crypto laws provided a “beginning, not an end,” with the commission awaiting passage of the CLARITY Act.
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Crypto World
Fairshake poll finds voters distrust crypto and AI
A Fairshake poll finds 45% of Americans call crypto too risky as industry PACs deploy over $100 million into midterms.
Summary
- A Public First poll conducted for Politico found 45% of Americans say investing in cryptocurrency is not worth the risk.
- The same poll found 44% say AI is developing too fast, and two-thirds want Congress to impose strict oversight on artificial intelligence.
- Pro-crypto PAC Fairshake and pro-AI PAC Leading the Future have together deployed over $100 million in 2026 midterm races.
A Politico poll conducted by Public First in April 2026 found that 45% of Americans say investing in cryptocurrency is not worth the risk, even if potential returns are high. The survey of 2,035 adults also found 44% believe AI is developing too fast, and nearly two-thirds want Congress to impose strict regulations or broad oversight on artificial intelligence.
The findings arrive as industry-backed super PACs pour unprecedented sums into the 2026 midterm cycle. Fairshake, the pro-crypto PAC backed by Coinbase, Andreessen Horowitz, and Ripple, has spent roughly $28 million across competitive primaries.
The pro-AI group Leading the Future, launched in August 2025, has raised more than $75 million and deployed funds in races across North Carolina, Texas, Illinois, and New York. Their combined spending exceeds $100 million.
A political liability in the making
The poll found that in hypothetical matchups, respondents were far less likely to support candidates backed by groups pushing looser AI regulation. Political observers told Politico that once voters connect campaign money to the industries behind it, backlash could be swift. “I do think if they see somebody is backed by crypto, that’s always going to be a problem,” former Ohio Representative Jim Renacci reportedly said.
The disconnect between spending and public trust is sharpest in name recognition. Only 9% of respondents have heard of Leading the Future, and just 3% recognise Fairshake. The industry has financial power that has not yet translated into public legitimacy.
That gap matters because both Fairshake and the crypto industry’s primary legislative goal, the Clarity Act, depend on the same Senate that faces midterm exposure.
As crypto.news documented, if Democrats take control of either chamber in November, Clarity Act passage odds are described as close to zero. Voter distrust of crypto at 45% makes the midterm environment a risk that PAC spending alone cannot resolve.
Crypto World
Different voices in product, policy and hiring change crypto outcomes, panelists tell Consensus Miami
The right voices in the right rooms can reshape product, policy and hiring outcomes in crypto, three senior executives told CoinDesk’s Consensus Miami conference on Tuesday. Each cited a moment from her own organization when an outside perspective changed what was being built, argued or prioritized.
Mastercard SVP for Blockchain & Digital Assets Maja Lapcevic said her company’s crypto team had initially viewed infrastructure as the key to crypto adoption, until a partner reframed the problem around usability. “We probably all thought about infrastructure to be the winning formula for crypto,” she said. “But one of our partners actually really helped shed light on how we make crypto accessible, not complex, very simple to use.” That thinking helped push Mastercard toward cards linked to stablecoins, including for users in markets with limited access to traditional financial services, she said.
Crypto Council for Innovation Chief Strategy Officer Alison Mangiero said her organization had a similar realization around staking after bringing builders into policy discussions. “Sometimes we might think we understand, or we’ll put things into a bucket,” she said. “We’ll take a shortcut and say, oh, that sounds like a fund. Oh, that sounds like interest or yield, when in actuality what’s going on under the hood is fundamentally different.” After hearing from people building staking primitives, she said, CCI understood the need to describe staking as a technical service rather than a financialized product.
Clerisy Co-Founder and Managing Partner Alexandra Wilkis Wilson brought the argument to hiring. “Many of us fall into a very comfortable bias of hiring people who not only might look like ourselves or remind you of your younger self,” she said. She recalled one 10-person startup where a Myers-Briggs analysis found that eight of the 10 team members were extroverts. “It’s really important, when you’re growing teams, to not only bring in diversity on the outside, but also to think about diversity on the inside,” she said.
Mangiero closed by framing the issue as one for the broader industry. Crypto “is having a moment right now where folks are really interested in hearing our voice,” she said, “but that begs the question, what is our voice at the end of the day?” The conference, she added, “is called Consensus for a reason.” Good policy, she said, requires the industry to ensure different communities are reflected, including token holders and people building on top of blockchain networks, while also protecting consumers and allowing innovation to thrive.
Crypto World
Strategy weighs selling bitcoin to fund dividends amid Q1 net loss
Strategy (MSTR), the world’s largest publicly traded corporate holder of bitcoin, floated the idea of selling bitcoin in order to cover its dividend obligations.
Executive Chairman Michael Saylor suggested, during its Q1 2026 earnings call, the company may sell a portion of its bitcoin holdings to fund dividend payments, stating: “We will probably sell some bitcoin to pay a dividend just to inoculate the market and send the message that we did it.”
The company disclosed a $12.54 billion net loss for Q4, while maintaining a total bitcoin position of 818,334 BTC at an average acquisition cost of $75,537 per coin.
Strategy has an outstanding dividend obligation of approximately $1.5 billion, including annualized preferred stock dividends and interest on outstanding debt. The firm has roughly 18 months of dividend coverage, based on its USD reserves relative to these obligations.
Saylor described the model as leveraging credit to acquire Bitcoin, allowing it to appreciate, and then selectively selling portions of the asset to meet dividend commitments.
“You buy bitcoin with credit, you let it appreciate, and then you sell bitcoin to pay the dividend.
Following the announcement, Strategy’s stock fell more than 4% in after-hours trading, while bitcoin declined below $81,000.
Crypto World
CME Group to Launch Bitcoin Volatility Futures on June 1

The derivatives giant is rolling out CFTC-regulated contracts that let traders isolate Bitcoin volatility from price direction, settling to a new 30-day implied volatility benchmark.
Crypto World
Lighter Names USDC as Preferred Stablecoin in New Circle Partnership

The agreement spans spot and perpetual trading, settlement, liquidations, and onboarding flows on the decentralized exchange.
Crypto World
Coinbase Taps Centrifuge as Preferred Tokenization Partner

The exchange’s strategic investment cements Centrifuge as the go-to issuance layer for compliant onchain assets, starting with a tokenized S&P 500 product for non-U.S. users.
Crypto World
BeInCrypto Institutional Research: 15 Firms Leading Digital Asset Adoption
Digital asset adoption is now moving through banks, asset managers, custodians, tokenization platforms, and crypto-native institutional arms. Leader in Digital Asset Adoption is an award category within The BeInCrypto Institutional 100, an annual research-driven program recognizing institutional digital asset excellence across 26 categories and six pillars.
This category sits in Pillar 3: Adoption & Use Cases. The long list tracks 15 firms that launched products, deployed capital, built infrastructure, or created market signals between April 2025 and March 2026. A shortlist will be named in May 2026, with the winner announced at Proof of Talk in Paris on June 2–3, 2026.
- Long list: 15 firms across banks, asset managers, custodians, tokenized funds, deposit tokens, stablecoins, and institutional crypto platforms
- Initial pool: More than 30 institutions screened; 15 advanced to the long list
- Scoring: 30% quantitative data · 50% Expert Council · 20% disclosed company data
- Criteria assessed: Strategic commitment, products launched, capital deployed, organizational investment, industry signal, forward momentum
- Data sources: SEC 13F filings, OCC approvals, MiCA-CASP authorizations, FCA, FINMA, MAS, BaFin, JFSA disclosures, audited reports, company releases, PitchBook, Tracxn, and Crunchbase
| # | Firm | Adoption Sub-Segment | HQ | Reach | Top Licensure / Live Product | Representative Work |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | JPMorgan Chase | Bank-led tokenization | New York, USA | $4T+ assets JPMD live on Base |
OCC-regulated national bank JPMD USD deposit token |
Hired Oliver Harris to lead Kinexys Kinexys Fund Flow live with private bank partners |
| 2 | BlackRock | Asset manager adoption | New York, USA | $12.5T+ AUM IBIT 800K+ BTC; BUIDL $2.85B |
IBIT, ETHA, ETHB BUIDL tokenized money market fund |
ETHB staked Ether ETF launched Mar 2026 IBIT became a major institutional Bitcoin vehicle |
| 3 | Goldman Sachs | Tokenization platform | New York, USA | $3.1T AUM GS DAP live on Canton |
SEC and FINRA registered GS DAP institutional DLT platform |
Tokenized MMF platform launched with BNY GS DAP planned industry-owned spinout |
| 4 | BNY | Crypto custody | New York, USA | $55.8T AUC/A $2.5T daily payments |
OCC-regulated bank Live BTC and ETH custody |
Co-custodian for Morgan Stanley MSBT IBIT cash custodian and administrator |
| 5 | Fidelity Investments | Full-stack crypto adoption | Boston, USA | $15T+ AUA FBTC and FETH live |
OCC conditional national trust charter Fidelity Digital Assets, NA |
National trust bank charter approved Dec 2025 Plans include stablecoin and staking services |
| 6 | Morgan Stanley | Wealth crypto distribution | New York, USA | $5.5T+ wealth assets MSBT live on NYSE Arca |
OCC charter pending Morgan Stanley Digital Trust filed |
Franklin Crypto launched via a 250 Digital deal BENJI used as part of acquisition consideration |
| 7 | Standard Chartered | Multi-product bank adoption | London, UK | $900B assets CIB custody live in Lux and HK |
FCA and multi-jurisdiction CIB HK stablecoin licence candidate |
Naveen Mallela joins as the payments head Zodia Custody reportedly moving into the CIB division |
| 8 | KuCoin | Crypto-native institutional bridge | Mahé, Seychelles | 40M+ users 200+ countries |
MiCAR-CASP via KuCoin EU Institutional custody integrations |
Ceffu and Cactus custody integrations Asseto tokenized RWA collateral pilot |
| 9 | Citi | Tokenized deposits | New York, USA | $2.4T assets CTS live in major markets |
OCC-regulated bank Citi Token Services |
CTS integrated with 24/7 USD clearing Ether custody pilot completed |
| 10 | Franklin Templeton | Tokenized funds | San Mateo, USA | $1.7T+ AUM BENJI/FOBXX ~$843M |
SEC-registered FOBXX EZBC and EZET live |
Franklin Crypto launched via a 250 Digital deal BENJI used as part of the acquisition consideration |
| 11 | Nomura · Laser Digital | TradFi crypto subsidiary | Tokyo / Zurich | Nomura $650B AUM Komainu regulated custody JV |
UAE VARA, ADGM, Switzerland OCC charter filed Jan 2026 |
Laser Digital National Trust Bank application filed Komainu custody active across jurisdictions |
| 12 | HSBC | Tokenization and digital securities | London, UK | $3T+ assets Orion $3.5B+ issuance |
UK DIGIT mandate HKMA stablecoin issuer licence |
HSBC Orion selected for UK DIGIT pilot Cross-bank tokenized deposit transaction completed |
| 13 | DBS | Bank-backed digital exchange | Singapore | $540B assets DDEx volume up 8x in 2025 |
MAS Recognised Market Operator DBS Digital Exchange |
Integrated crypto into trust planning Crypto options and ETF-linked notes live |
| 14 | Société Générale · SG-FORGE | Bank-issued stablecoins | Paris, France | SocGen €1.4T assets EURCV and USDCV live |
MiCA CASP authorized EUR and USD stablecoins |
Issued MiCA-compliant EUR and USD stablecoins SWIFT pilot for tokenized bond settlement |
| 15 | MEXC | Tokenized RWA bridge | Seychelles | 40M+ users 13.74M MAU |
100+ Ondo tokenized stock pairs listed Gold futures reached a strong global share |
100+ Ondo tokenized stock pairs listed Gold futures reached strong global share |
About This List
The BeInCrypto Institutional 100: Digital Asset Adoption (2026 Long List) identifies institutions making productized moves into digital assets. The category focuses on banks, custodians, asset managers, asset servicers, broker-dealers, and selected crypto-native institutional arms that connect traditional finance with tokenized assets, custody, settlement, stablecoins, or regulated digital asset access.
Crypto-native firms focused mainly on exchange infrastructure, prime brokerage, market making, or trading systems are evaluated separately under Pillar 2 categories.
Methodology
This category is evaluated under Track B of the BeInCrypto Institutional 100 methodology: 30% quantitative metrics, 50% Expert Council scoring, and 20% disclosed data.
Assessment spans six weighted criteria: strategic commitment, products launched, capital deployed, organizational investment, industry signal, and forward momentum.
Data was verified using SEC 13F filings, OCC national trust bank charter approvals, MiCA-CASP authorizations, FCA, FINMA, MAS, BaFin, and JFSA disclosures, audited annual reports, company releases, and private-market sources, including PitchBook, Tracxn, and Crunchbase.
The post BeInCrypto Institutional Research: 15 Firms Leading Digital Asset Adoption appeared first on BeInCrypto.
Crypto World
Forward Industries, RockawayX Invest in OnRe Reinsurance
Forward Industries and crypto investment company RockawayX have co-led a strategic investment in OnRe, a startup building reinsurance infrastructure on the Solana blockchain, in a move aimed at bringing traditional risk-transfer markets onto decentralized rails.
The companies said Tuesday they co-led OnRe’s $5 million Series A round, with Forward planning to allocate up to $25 million into the platform’s yield-bearing token on Solana.
The funding will be used to expand OnRe’s platform and attract more institutional participants to onchain reinsurance, a niche but emerging segment within decentralized finance.
OnRe is attempting to shift parts of the reinsurance market — where insurers offload risk to third parties — onto blockchain infrastructure, using tokenization and smart contracts to manage underwriting and capital flows.
The initiative reflects a broader push to experiment with real-world financial services, including insurance and reinsurance, on blockchain networks, although adoption remains at an early stage.
Forward Industries (FWDI) is the largest corporate holder of Solana (SOL), with more than 7.01 million SOL on its balance sheet, according to industry data. Its Nasdaq-traded shares gained about 5.8% in Tuesday’s regular session, according to Yahoo Finance. In after hours activity, at last look, most of that increase evaporated. SOL was last trading hands at $86.61, up about 2.7%.

Forward Industries’ SOL accumulation over time. Source: CoinGecko
Related: Dubai Insurance launches crypto wallet for premium payments, claims
Blockchain pilots target inefficiencies in global reinsurance market
While estimates vary, the global reinsurance market is valued at more than $600 billion, with growth driven by rising demand for risk transfer. Total reinsurance premiums are closer to $2 trillion in value.
Blockchain-based platforms are being tested as a way to streamline traditionally manual processes by introducing shared ledgers for real-time tracking, underwriting and claims settlement.
OnRe is not alone in this effort. Re, a decentralized reinsurance protocol, is another project aiming to connect institutional capital with collateralized insurance risk while offering tokenized yield products.
Other protocols are also emerging to provide insurance and reinsurance coverage for decentralized finance applications and smart contracts, though the sector remains early-stage and largely experimental.
There are also efforts to apply blockchain and digital assets across different parts of the insurance value chain. For example, insurance broker Aon has tested the use of stablecoins for paying insurance premiums.
Tim Fletcher, CEO of Aon’s financial services devision, said tokenized assets are likely to become increasingly integrated into traditional financial systems.
Related: Crypto Biz: Capital has no consensus
Crypto World
Strategy Inc Posts $12.54B Net Loss in Q1 2026 as Bitcoin Price Drop Hits Holdings Hard
TLDR:
-
- Strategy held 818,334 BTC as of May 3, 2026, reflecting a 22% year-to-date growth in bitcoin holdings.
- STRC preferred stock raised $5.58B year to date, scaling to $8.5B total in just nine months of existence.
- Strategy achieved a 9.4% BTC Yield and a $4.97B BTC Dollar Gain through the first four months of 2026.
- The company has met 23 consecutive preferred dividend payments, totaling over $693 million since early 2025.
- Strategy held 818,334 BTC as of May 3, 2026, reflecting a 22% year-to-date growth in bitcoin holdings.
Strategy Inc posted a net loss of $12.54 billion for the first quarter of 2026. The loss was driven by a $14.46 billion unrealized loss on its bitcoin holdings.
Bitcoin prices fell during the quarter, pulling down the carrying value of the company’s digital assets. Despite the loss, Strategy continued expanding its bitcoin position and raising capital through its preferred equity products.
Bitcoin Holdings Expand Even as Prices Fall
Strategy held approximately 818,334 BTC as of May 3, 2026, marking a 22% growth year to date. The average purchase price per bitcoin stood at roughly $75,537.
The company’s total digital asset cost basis reached $61.81 billion. The market value of those holdings came in at $64.14 billion, based on a bitcoin price of about $78,374 as of May 1.
The company achieved a BTC Yield of 9.4% year to date through its capital markets activity. It also recorded a BTC Gain of 63,410 bitcoins and a BTC Dollar Gain of approximately $4.97 billion.
These figures reflect Strategy’s ongoing effort to grow bitcoin holdings on a per-share basis. The metrics are used internally to assess whether capital raises are accretive to shareholders.
President and CEO Phong Le addressed the broader market environment during the earnings announcement. “Adoption of Bitcoin continues to grow in 2026. Digital Credit, highlighted by STRC, has been a big success,” Le said.
He pointed to rising institutional activity from major banks as further validation of the company’s direction. Morgan Stanley, Goldman Sachs, and Citi were among those named as expanding into bitcoin-related services.
Strategy raised $11.68 billion year to date to fund its bitcoin acquisition strategy. The company used proceeds from its at-the-market offering program, pulling in $7.37 billion during Q1 alone.
An additional $4.32 billion came in between April 1 and May 3. Cash and cash equivalents stood at $2.21 billion as of March 31, 2026, down slightly from $2.30 billion at year-end 2025.
Total revenues rose 11.9% year over year to $124.3 million for the quarter. Gross profit reached $83.4 million, with a gross margin of 67.1%, compared to 69.4% in Q1 2025.
The software business remained a stable contributor to overall operations. Strategy continues to describe itself as an industry leader in AI-powered enterprise analytics software.
STRC Preferred Stock Sees Strong Demand
Strategy’s STRC preferred stock raised $5.58 billion year to date, representing 189% growth. The product scaled to $8.5 billion in just nine months, making it the largest preferred stock by market capitalization globally.
Daily trading volume reached $375 million, while volatility dropped to 3%. STRC maintained that stability even through the recent bitcoin bear market.
CFO Andrew Kang highlighted the company’s dividend track record during the quarter. “We continue to extend our track record of servicing our dividends, having now met our payment obligations on time and in full across 23 consecutive distributions,” Kang said.
Total cumulative preferred dividends declared and paid have reached over $693 million since early 2025. Kang also cited a BTC Dollar Gain of approximately $5 billion through the first four months of the year.
Executive Chairman Michael Saylor spoke to the growing ecosystem around the STRC instrument. “STRC has scaled to $8.5 billion in just 9 months and is now the largest preferred stock by market cap in the world,” Saylor said.
He attributed the product’s performance to its design, which extracts bitcoin’s returns while engineering price stability.
Saylor added that the company has proposed doubling STRC’s dividend payment frequency to a semi-monthly schedule.
Over $150 million of STRC is now held in corporate treasuries, including Prevalon, Strive, and Anchorage. More than $270 million sits across DeFi protocols such as Apyx and Saturn.
Strategy carries a Sharpe ratio of 2.53 on STRC. The company positions itself as the dominant issuer of digital credit instruments in the world.
Operating Loss Widens Year Over Year
Strategy’s operating loss for Q1 2026 reached $14.47 billion, compared to $5.92 billion for Q1 2025. The unrealized bitcoin loss of $14.46 billion accounted for nearly all of that figure.
Under current accounting standards, bitcoin must be marked to fair value each reporting period. Any price decline flows directly into the income statement as an unrealized loss.
Net loss attributable to common stockholders was $12.77 billion, compared to $4.23 billion in Q1 2025. On a diluted per-share basis, the loss came in at $38.25, versus $16.49 in the prior-year period.
The company’s preferred dividends contributed to the gap between net loss and the figure attributable to common stockholders. Strategy has declared and paid $692.5 million in cumulative preferred dividends to date.
Strategy confirmed it does not expect to generate accumulated earnings and profits for U.S. federal income tax purposes.
Distributions on preferred equity instruments are therefore expected to be treated as non-taxable return of capital for the foreseeable future.
This treatment is expected to remain in place for at least ten years. Shareholders are advised to consult their own tax advisors regarding individual circumstances.
Despite the reported losses, Strategy maintained its standing as the world’s largest corporate bitcoin holder. The company stated that its combination of bitcoin treasury management and enterprise analytics software supports long-term value creation.
Strategy’s dashboard at strategy.com serves as a public disclosure channel for its holdings, KPIs, and securities data. A live webinar covering the Q1 results was held on May 5 at 5:00 p.m. ET.
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