The month-long slide in crypto prices hasn’t just hit major assets like Bitcoin (BTC) and Ether (ETH) — it’s also dealing heavy losses to digital asset treasury companies that built their business models around accumulating crypto on their balance sheets.
That’s one of the key takeaways from a recent social media analysis by onchain data company CryptoQuant, which cited XRP-focused treasury company Evernorth as a prime example of the risks in this sector.
Evernorth has reportedly seen unrealized losses of about $78 million on its XRP position, mere weeks after acquiring the asset.
The pullback has also battered shares of Strategy (MSTR), the original Bitcoin treasury play. The company’s stock has dropped by more than 26% over the past month, as Bitcoin’s price has slumped, according to Google Finance data. CryptoQuant noted a 53% drop in MSTR shares from their all-time high.
However, Strategy still holds a sizable unrealized gain on its Bitcoin reserves, with an average cost basis of roughly $74,000 per BTC, according to BitcoinTreasuries.NET.
Meanwhile, BitMine, the largest Ether-holding corporation, is now sitting on approximately $2.1 billion in unrealized losses tied to its Ether reserves, according to CryptoQuant.
BitMine currently holds nearly 3.4 million ETH, having acquired more than 565,000 over the past month, according to industry data.
Related: Ripple-backed Evernorth nears launch of publicly traded XRP treasury
Digital asset treasury companies: Echoes of the dot-com bubble
Digital asset treasury companies, or DATs, have come under mounting valuation pressure in recent months, with analysts cautioning that their market worth is increasingly tied to the performance of their underlying crypto holdings.
Some analysts, including those at venture capital firm Breed, argue that only the strongest players will endure, noting that Bitcoin-focused treasuries may be best positioned to avoid a potential “death spiral.” The risk, they say, stems from a collapse in the companies’ market net asset value (mNAV) — a metric comparing enterprise value to the market value of their cryptocurrency investments.
Others have compared the rise of digital asset treasury companies to the dot-com boom and bust of the early 2000s, a period driven by long-term visionaries and innovators, as well as opportunists chasing quick gains.
Ray Youssef, founder of peer-to-peer lending platform NoOnes, predicted that most digital asset treasuries will ultimately fade out or collapse as market realities set in.
Related: Few Bitcoin treasury companies will survive ‘death spiral’: VC Report