Dormant Bitcoin Wallets Come to Life
These funds had remained untouched for over a decade. Their recent activation sparked immediate speculation. Given the timing and the amount involved, observers pointed to Back’s known long-term holdings and strategic initiatives around institutional Bitcoin products.
Although Back hasn’t made any public statements, reports of an upcoming SPAC deal involving his firm and a large BTC treasury suggest that this activity is more than coincidental.
A Bitcoin Treasury Company Plans to Go Public
The plan involves creating BSTR Holdings — a new public company that will merge with Cantor Equity Partners I, a SPAC entity. The merged firm is set to hold up to 30,000 BTC as part of its treasury and will list on Nasdaq.
Unlike ETFs or mining firms, BSTR will operate as a direct BTC-holding business, using a hybrid capital structure — partly in fiat, partly in BTC — allowing for more native exposure to Bitcoin.
Why It Matters
- This represents a shift from anonymous cold storage to regulated, transparent asset management
- It offers an alternative to ETFs — exposure to BTC through equity ownership
- It could prompt other early holders to bring long-dormant capital into the formal financial system
What Changes for the Market
- BTC becomes a corporate asset class in its own right
- Investors gain BTC exposure through shares, without custody or exchanges
- Institutional legitimacy for holding BTC on public balance sheets is strengthened
The activation of 80,000 BTC isn’t just another on-chain anomaly — it signals a structural shift. Bitcoin capital once outside the system is now entering public markets, guided by one of the most respected figures in the space.
If successful, the BSTR deal could mark a turning point in how legacy BTC holders engage with the modern financial world — and open the door for others to follow.