Bitcoin miner Marathon Digital acquired $100 million worth of the flagship digital asset, boosting its total holdings to over 20,000 BTC, according to a July 25 statement.
Bitcoin Treasuries data ranks Marathon as the second-largest Bitcoin-holding firm, while MicroStrategy remains the top public holder with over 220,000 BTC or 1.07% of the total supply.
Meanwhile, the miner said it had readopted its “hold” strategy and intends to retain all the BTC it mines and acquires via purchases.
Marathon Chairman and CEO Fried Thiel said the strategy reflects the company’s confidence in Bitcoin’s long-term value. He said:
“We believe bitcoin is the world’s best treasury reserve asset and support the idea of sovereign wealth funds holding it. We encourage governments and corporations to all hold bitcoin as a reserve asset.”
In a post on social media platform X, Thiel compared Marathon’s new HODL policy to Michael Saylor‘s MicroStrategy.
Notably, Saylor praised the move, saying:
“Every company should have a Bitcoin Strategic Reserve.”
Meanwhile, Marathon CFO Salman Khan explained that the new policy returns the firm to its previous approach.
Khan attributed the policy shift to favorable market trends and growing institutional support for the asset. The improving macroeconomic environment also allows the firm to double down on its current approach.
Khan added:
“Bitcoin’s recent price decline, coupled with the strength of our balance sheet, afforded us an opportunity to add to our holdings. We look forward to continuing to leverage our technological expertise to support Bitcoin and distributed digital asset ecosystems.”
Other miners selling
Marathon’s Bitcoin buying actions contrast sharply with the recent trend of other miners selling.
On July 22, Mathew Sigel, VanEck’s head of digital research, citing Glassnode data, pointed out that BTC miners had unloaded 170% of their 30-day mined supply. He wrote:
“BTC miners are now selling heavily into the recent rally, unloading 170% of the 30-day mined supply. Such avid dumping has occurred at both bear market lows and bull market highs, leaving little signal.”