Bitcoin-focused treasury firm Strive bags $225 million for debt repayment and additional bitcoin purchases.

Bitcoin treasury firm Strive (ASST) has bolstered its balance sheet after raising $225 million in a SATA preferred stock offering, using the capital to pay down debt and expand its bitcoin holdings.

Investor demand exceeded expectations, with orders topping $600 million, prompting the company to increase the deal size from an initial $150 million target, according to a press release.

The proceeds and associated exchanges allowed Strive to rapidly reduce leverage following its acquisition of Semler Scientific (SMLR). The company retired $110 million of Semler’s $120 million in outstanding obligations, including $90 million of convertible notes converted into SATA stock and the full repayment of a $20 million Coinbase Credit facility.

With the debt reduction completed, all of Strive’s bitcoin holdings are now unencumbered. The company said it expects to retire the remaining $10 million of debt by April 2026, ahead of its original timeline.

Strive also used part of the funds to acquire 333.89 bitcoin at an average price of $89,851, lifting total holdings to 13,131 BTC. At current prices near $89,100, the stash is valued at more than $1.1 billion, making Strive the tenth-largest public corporate bitcoin holder globally.

Shares of ASST were down about 1.5% in early Wednesday trading at $0.81.

  • Related Posts

    Robinhood’s fourth-quarter revenue comes in below estimates as digital asset volumes decline.

    Robinhood’s crypto business took a hit in Q4, as falling digital asset prices weighed on trading activity despite the company’s expansion of crypto features. The brokerage reported $221 million in…

    Continue reading
    Bithumb says major internal control failures created exposure to possible system interference.

    South Korea’s Bithumb has admitted that serious internal control failures led to the accidental transfer of bitcoin worth more than $40 billion to customers, an incident that briefly disrupted trading…

    Continue reading