- Tether has proposed merging Twenty One Capital with Strike (crypto payments) and Elektron Energy (Bitcoin mining) to create a platform with recurring revenue beyond passive Bitcoin exposure.
- Twenty One Capital has fallen 31% since its December NYSE debut — far worse than Bitcoin’s own 18% decline — as the pure Bitcoin treasury model lost favor with investors.
- Jack Mallers, who already runs both Twenty One and Strike, is proposed to lead the combined company; terms and timing were not disclosed.
- The move reflects a broader shift across crypto treasury companies to add operating businesses that generate real cash flow, not just hold coins.
What Happened?
Tether — the stablecoin giant and primary backer of Twenty One Capital — has proposed merging the struggling Bitcoin treasury company with two related businesses: Strike, a crypto trading and payments platform, and Elektron Energy, a Bitcoin mining firm. Twenty One Capital launched in December via a SPAC, backed by Tether, SoftBank, and Cantor Fitzgerald, with more than 40,000 Bitcoin — the third-largest corporate Bitcoin holding at the time. But the company has since underperformed even Bitcoin itself, falling 31% from its NYSE debut while Bitcoin dropped 18%. The proposed combination, according to Tether’s announcement, would move the company “beyond treasury exposure alone and toward a platform with operating businesses, recurring revenue opportunities, and long-term Bitcoin accumulation capabilities.”
Why It Matters?
Twenty One Capital’s struggles expose the fundamental flaw in the pure Bitcoin treasury company model that proliferated in 2024-2025 following Michael Saylor’s Strategy playbook: investors eventually ask why they’d pay a premium for a company that just holds Bitcoin when they can buy Bitcoin directly. As Bitcoin’s price retreated, treasury company stocks sold off even harder — creating a vicious cycle of leveraged underperformance. Tether’s pivot toward a vertically integrated crypto operating platform — payments, mining, and treasury combined — is an acknowledgment that scale alone in Bitcoin holding is not a sustainable competitive advantage. It also signals that the era of easy capital raises for passive crypto treasury vehicles may be ending.
What’s Next?
The merger proposal is still in early stages with no disclosed terms or timeline, and Twenty One, Strike, and Elektron did not respond to comment requests. Tether’s proposal will need approval from Twenty One’s shareholders and potentially regulatory review. If completed, the combined entity — led by Jack Mallers — would represent a bet that the future of public crypto companies is as full-stack platforms, not passive holders. Other Bitcoin treasury companies are likely watching closely; similar pivots toward revenue-generating operations could follow if investor appetite for pure-play Bitcoin exposure continues to erode.
Source: Bloomberg













