Unlock stock picks and a broker-level newsfeed that powers Wall Street. Upgrade Now
Meet Wall Street's Most Unusual Bitcoin Stock: A Coal Producer Sporting an Eye-Popping 10% Yield

In This Article:

For more than a century, no asset class has come remotely close to matching the average annual total return, including dividends, of stocks. But since Bitcoin (CRYPTO: BTC) entered the scene in the early 2010s, it's run circles around Wall Street's major stock indexes.

In May 2010, a single Bitcoin could be purchased for less than $0.01. But as of this writing in the late evening hours on Feb. 4, a single token will set an investor back by more than $97,500.

A physical gold Bitcoin stood on its side and placed in front of a volatile crypto chart.
Image source: Getty Images.

A multitude of factors have caused investors to gravitate to Bitcoin, including (in no particular order):

  • Its first-mover advantages within the cryptocurrency

  • The perception of limited supply -- no more than 21 million Bitcoin will ever be mined.

  • Halving events, which have occurred every four years and limit the amount of new Bitcoin released into circulation.

  • The potential for the U.S. and/or other world governments to create a strategic Bitcoin reserve.

  • A steady increase in U.S. money-printing, which has devalued the U.S. dollar over time and provided a case to own/HODL

But there's another variable that can now be added to this list: corporate adoption.

Bitcoin ownership among public companies is climbing

Over time, a growing number of publicly traded companies in the U.S. and abroad have added Bitcoin to their balance sheet. As of late December, close to four dozen owned at least 100 Bitcoin.

There are two prominent ways public companies get Bitcoin onto their balance sheet: buy it or mine it.

The clear-as-day biggest buyer is self-proclaimed "Bitcoin Treasury Company" MicroStrategy (NASDAQ: MSTR), which has built up a 471,107-token position on its balance sheet, as of Jan. 27. For context, MicroStrategy is holding 2.24% of all Bitcoin that will ever be in existence, and its CEO Michael Saylor has sworn that none of these tokens will be sold. With at-the-market common stock issuances and preferred stock sales at Saylor's disposal, MicroStrategy is expected to continue buying Bitcoin.

The other popular way to build up a Bitcoin reserve is to mine the world's largest cryptocurrency by market value. This type of "mining" involves using high-powered computers to solve complex equations that validate and settle a group of transactions on Bitcoin's blockchain, known as a block. The reward for being the first to resolve a block is currently 3.125 Bitcoin, plus mining fees.

There are companies, such as Marathon Holdings (NASDAQ: MARA), Riot Platforms (NASDAQ: RIOT), and Hut 8 (NASDAQ: HUT), which spend big bucks to purchase the necessary infrastructure to earn Bitcoin block rewards. As of the end of January, Marathon held 45,659 Bitcoin, Riot held 18,221 Bitcoin, and Hut 8 held 10,208 Bitcoin in its reserve.