The Blockchain Group одобрила увеличение капитала на €10 млрд для развития биткоин-стратегии

cryptonews.ruPublicado em 2024-06-11Última atualização em 2025-06-11

  • Компания The Blockchain Group планирует привлечь €10 млрд для ускорения стратегии по хранению биткоина.
  • Акционеры фирмы поддержали все предложенные резолюции.

Французская компания The Blockchain Group получила одобрение акционеров на увеличение капитала более чем на €10 млрд (около $11,4 млрд). В заявлении сказано, что цель инициативы заключается в ускорении стратегии по накоплению биткоинов на балансе.

Известно, что участие в общем собрании приняли владельцы 38,99% голосов. За все резолюции проголосовали более 95% участников.

«В частности, утвержденные резолюции позволяют Правлению иметь набор финансовых делегаций для выпуска акций или ценных бумаг, которые предоставляют доступ к капиталу, с или без сохранения преимущественного права подписки, путем публичного предложения или в пользу определенных категорий получателей», — говорится в пресс-релизе.

Кроме того, в состав совета правления компании вошел Александр Лаизе, который будет работать до 2030 года. Кроме того, он станет заместителем CEO по вопросам биткоин-стратегии.

Генеральный директор The Blockchain Group Жан-Филипп Казадепакс-Суле заявил:

«Я хочу поблагодарить наших акционеров за доверие, которое они проявили, утвердив эти новые финансовые полномочия. Они позволят нам ускорить нашу стратегию, направленную на увеличение количества биткоинов на акцию в долгосрочной перспективе».

Ранее мы сообщали, что The Blockchain Group привлечет $340 млн для увеличения биткоин-резерва.

Leituras Relacionadas

Losing $55 Million to Sell Bitcoin, MicroStrategy's Faith Reaches Its Interest Payment Day

On July 6th, Michael Saylor's MicroStrategy announced the sale of 3,588 BTC for approximately $216 million, incurring a realized loss of around $55.45 million compared to its average cost basis. This move, contradicting Saylor's long-standing "never sell" Bitcoin philosophy, was executed to pay dividends on its digital credit securities. The article traces this shift from a small "desensitization test" sale of 32 BTC in late May to the board's authorization on June 30th to sell up to $1.25 billion in Bitcoin for corporate purposes like dividends and buybacks. Analysis reveals that MicroStrategy's previous growth "flywheel"—using stock premiums to fund more Bitcoin purchases—has stalled. With its stock trading near a critical threshold (1.22x its Bitcoin NAV), issuing new shares would dilute value. Simultaneously, its financing channels (preferred stock, common stock ATM, convertible notes) are constrained while facing rigid annual dividend/interest obligations of roughly $1.76 billion. Consequently, selling Bitcoin became the calculated "optimal solution" under its own financial model. This transforms MicroStrategy from crypto's most prominent steady buyer into a predictable seller, creating a potential overhead of ~2,400 BTC in monthly selling pressure if obligations are fully covered by sales. This shift challenges the valuation models of the entire Digital Asset Treasury (DAT) sector that emulated MicroStrategy. The company's path forward now hinges on Bitcoin's price recovery, which would allow its preferred stock to trade at par and reopen its financing flywheel, creating a cyclical dependency between the firm's financial model and the asset it holds.

链捕手Há 29m

Losing $55 Million to Sell Bitcoin, MicroStrategy's Faith Reaches Its Interest Payment Day

链捕手Há 29m

OUSD Fake Partnership Controversy? Stablecoins and the Credit Game of Giant Endorsements

Author: Chloe, ChainCatcher Last week, Open Standard launched the dollar stablecoin OpenUSD (OUSD) with a list of over 140 supposedly supporting companies, including major names like Visa, Mastercard, Stripe, American Express, BlackRock, BNY, Standard Chartered, Google, Shopify, Samsung, Coinbase, Solana, and Ripple. The announcement initially impacted Circle's stock price, but doubts about the list quickly emerged. Several Korean firms named, including Samsung Electronics, Shinhan Financial Group, Dunamu (Upbit's parent), and K Bank, clarified they had not formally agreed to join the alliance. Some stated they were only approached for potential interest or learned of their inclusion from news reports, expressing surprise. Similar concerns were raised by U.S. entities, suggesting the list may be misleading. OUSD, led by Zach Abrams of Bridge (acquired by Stripe in 2024), promotes zero-fee minting/redemption, no transaction limits, and sharing reserve asset yields with partners instead of keeping profits. However, this model makes listed partnership imply economic benefits, turning it into a serious credibility issue. This incident reflects a common crypto marketing tactic of leveraging big names. A Chainstory analysis found over 62% of crypto press releases in late 2025 were high-risk or scams. The situation recalls Facebook's Libra (later Diem), which collapsed in 2022 after initial heavyweight backers like Visa and PayPal withdrew under regulatory pressure. Circle CEO Jeremy Allaire welcomed the competition but highlighted the challenges. He argued stablecoin success relies on network effects and real usage, not just alliances. He criticized OUSD's "free" model and full revenue sharing as potentially starving infrastructure development. Noting the dominance of USDT (~$1.84T) and USDC (~$730B) in the ~$2.91T stablecoin market, he suggested many new entrants lack real utility despite inflated circulation from incentives. In conclusion, while OUSD has genuine backing and a distinct model, its future depends on actual adoption in B2B payments, settlements, and cross-border transactions, not just a prestigious partner list. The market will determine if it is a credible challenger or merely another marketing promise.

链捕手Há 31m

OUSD Fake Partnership Controversy? Stablecoins and the Credit Game of Giant Endorsements

链捕手Há 31m

Trading

Spot
活动图片