The Boardroom Maximalist Club Now Has 151 Members and $74.6B Worth of Reasons to Be Bullish
The corporate world's Bitcoin obsession has officially reached "too many Zoom calls about blockchain" levels. According to data published April 2, 2026, 151 publicly traded companies now hold a combined 1,118,892 $BTC, worth approximately $74.60 billion at current prices. That's 5.32% of the total Bitcoin supply sitting on corporate balance sheets—a number that would've had Satoshi raising an eyebrow (if he ever checked his email anymore).
Leading the charge is Strategy, which continues to flex its position as the undisputed heavyweight champion of corporate Bitcoin ownership. The company's stack of 762,099 $BTC, valued at $50.81 billion, makes up the lion's share of these holdings. Its relentless accumulation strategy—whether markets are mooning or bleeding—has made it the template for corporate treasury diversification into crypto. Somewhere, traditional CFOs are staring at their treasury bills and wondering where it all went wrong.
The mining crowd is also deep in the $BTC reserves. Marathon Digital Holdings sits on 38,689 $BTC ($2.58 billion), while Twenty One Capital holds 37,229 $BTC ($2.48 billion) and Metaplanet boasts 35,102 $BTC ($2.34 billion). These companies basically mine Bitcoin, then turn around and buy more Bitcoin with the proceeds—it's like printing money, except the money is already money, just more concentrated.
Exchanges and investment platforms aren't sitting this one out either. Bullish commands 24,340 $BTC ($1.62 billion), Coinbase keeps 14,458 $BTC ($963.95 million), and Galaxy Digital holds 17,102 $BTC ($1.14 billion). Because apparently, when your entire business model revolves around other people's crypto, the logical next step is loading up your own balance sheet.
The mining sector rounds out the major players: Hut 8 Corp at 13,696 $BTC ($913.14 million) and CleanSpark at 13,099 $BTC ($873.34 million). At this point, the only companies NOT holding Bitcoin are probably still writing internal memos about "blockchain use cases."
What's clear is that the institutional view of Bitcoin has shifted. It's no longer just a speculative trade—it's becoming a legitimate treasury reserve asset and a hedge against macroeconomic uncertainty. The diversity of companies accumulating—from miners to exchanges to investment firms—suggests Bitcoin has transcended niche appeal. It's now a cross-industry
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