From Passive Exposure to Active Infrastructure: The Growing Role of Bitcoin Treasuries in Yield Generation

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Nearly 200 public companies now hold crypto on their balance sheets, but most of them follow the same script, i.e., buy Bitcoin, disclose it in a filing, and let the price swings do all the hard work. 

And while that model has historically produced impressive paper gains during bull runs, it has also exposed a structural gap: whenever things go sideways, or when shareholders start asking harder questions about return on capital, passive holding does not have a clean answer.

BTCS S.A., listed on the Warsaw Stock Exchange’s NewConnect market, operates on an entirely different premise where, instead of treating digital assets as a static treasury reserve, the company has built what it terms an Active Digital Asset Treasury Company (DATCO) structure.  

This operational model is designed to generate recurring yield from its holdings without liquidating them, all while maintaining full regulatory transparency as a publicly listed entity. Thanks to this financial proposition, the company recently closed a Series F round (as well as launched a fresh $100M offering).

Running the Infrastructure, Not Just Owning the Assets

The practical expression of BTCS S.A.’s model is validator operations, as the firm currently runs live validators on two networks: CoreDAO, the Bitcoin-aligned Layer 1, and ZIGChain, which powers institutional-grade RWA tokenization infrastructure. 

The work is not passive and involves uptime management, risk mitigation, protocol monitoring, and keying in on security risks (as each chain). This is BTCS’s core operational business.

On the custody and trading side, the company has contracted with BitGo, one of the most security-focused custodians in digital assets, and with OKX for liquidity and trading access. This provides the structural backbone that European institutional investors increasingly require before engaging with digital asset companies.

Moreover, BTCS S.A. entered into a formal liquidity partnership with Hemi this March. In conjunction with the Bitcoin layer-2 network, the company committed up to 100 BTC at a backstopped 10% APY for the initial two months (dropping to 6% thereafter with all rewards paid directly in Bitcoin and USDC). The arrangement was disclosed under Article 17(1) of the EU Market Abuse Regulation.

Lastly, the company expanded its market reach by obtaining a listing on Interactive Brokers, a platform serving clients in more than 200 countries and territories, and by starting trading on the Frankfurt Stock Exchange, further expanding its European investor base.

Building Europe’s Digital Asset Model

The broader context matters here, as European Bitcoin treasury companies cannot simply replicate Strategy’s (formerly MicroStrategy) playbook, given that the capital markets/regulatory environments they operate in are very different. What works in the United States, especially large-scale Bitcoin accumulation backed by convertible notes in a permissive regulatory climate, does not translate cleanly to European bourses.

And with the EU’s MiCA transitional period ending on July 1, 2026, any entity providing crypto-asset services to EU clients without a MiCA license after that date will be in breach of EU law. For BTCS S.A., this regulatory inflection point is less a disruption and more a validation, as its publicly listed structure, professional custody arrangements, and MAR-compliant disclosures already align with where European digital asset compliance is heading.

With $30 billion in real-world assets now tokenized on-chain, BTCS S.A running validators on two of the chains most directly involved in this buildout, seems to be a clear signal of the platform’s increasing market clout.  

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