tldr; MARA Holdings, a publicly traded Bitcoin mining company, has updated its treasury policy to allow Bitcoin sales, marking a shift from its previous strategy of holding mined Bitcoin as a long-term investment. As of December 31, 2025, MARA holds 53,822 BTC, making it the second-largest publicly disclosed corporate Bitcoin holder. The company began selling Bitcoin in the second half of 2025 to fund operations and plans to continue monetizing Bitcoin in 2026 to enhance financial flexibility and shareholder value.
*This summary is auto generated by a bot and not meant to replace reading the original article. As always, DYOR.
Ourcrypto_news on
Interesting move. Selling a portion of BTC after a policy update makes sense for a company managing treasury and short‑term obligations, but holding **53,822 BTC** still shows long‑term conviction. It’s not a “dump,” more like **liquidity management** while keeping most of their stack intact.
Financial_Clue_2534 on
What happens when you let the suits in charge. I’m foreshadowing they sell now for $$$ then more excuses will pop up for them to sell. Before you know it their holdings are at a minimum and Bitcoin does what it does and melts faces.
NeffAddict on
Having a net income of **-1.7B** last quarter would suggest they cannot sustain holding the pile long term.
Joy_Boy_12 on
What about their kaspa bag?
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tldr; MARA Holdings, a publicly traded Bitcoin mining company, has updated its treasury policy to allow Bitcoin sales, marking a shift from its previous strategy of holding mined Bitcoin as a long-term investment. As of December 31, 2025, MARA holds 53,822 BTC, making it the second-largest publicly disclosed corporate Bitcoin holder. The company began selling Bitcoin in the second half of 2025 to fund operations and plans to continue monetizing Bitcoin in 2026 to enhance financial flexibility and shareholder value.
*This summary is auto generated by a bot and not meant to replace reading the original article. As always, DYOR.
Interesting move. Selling a portion of BTC after a policy update makes sense for a company managing treasury and short‑term obligations, but holding **53,822 BTC** still shows long‑term conviction. It’s not a “dump,” more like **liquidity management** while keeping most of their stack intact.
What happens when you let the suits in charge. I’m foreshadowing they sell now for $$$ then more excuses will pop up for them to sell. Before you know it their holdings are at a minimum and Bitcoin does what it does and melts faces.
Having a net income of **-1.7B** last quarter would suggest they cannot sustain holding the pile long term.
What about their kaspa bag?