SpaceX’s $1.4 billion Bitcoin hoard is a strategic reserve—and an accounting headache

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When SpaceX filed for its much-hyped IPO, investors learned that the size of its Bitcoin hoard exceeded previous estimates. When the company finally does go public, it’s an open question what the firm helmed by Elon Musk, who has recently cooled on his longtime crypto fervor, will do with that stash, which is currently worth nearly $1.4 billion.

The situation is not entirely unprecedented. Tesla, another Musk-owned company that went public, still has a Bitcoin stockpile that it has held since 2021. But SpaceX’s 18,712 Bitcoin is substantially more than the 11,509 that Tesla now holds. 

In the case of Tesla, the company sold a large chunk of its initial Bitcoin purchases in 2022, and there are reports suggesting that SpaceX has sold some of its holdings as well. Still, it doesn’t seem to be the case that a newly-public SpaceX is likely to sell its Bitcoin—at least in the short term. 

“Could SpaceX sell its Bitcoin as a public company? Certainly, but it would likely take a major strategic shift or a genuine liquidity crisis, not routine treasury management. Like Tesla, SpaceX seems to treat Bitcoin as a long-term reserve asset, not a trading vehicle,” David Krause, a finance professor emeritus at Marquette University, told Fortune

Until SpaceX’s S-1 filing came out, blockchain sleuths believed the company held around 8,300 Bitcoin. The filing showed SpaceX held roughly $1.4 billion of the currency that was acquired at a cost basis of $661 million, meaning that its Bitcoin investment has more than doubled. It also means that SpaceX’s Bitcoin is worth around 1.8% of the company’s total asset base, based on the balance sheet it filed with the SEC. Given its smaller size compared to SpaceX’s cash and securities holdings, the company may view the asset as a kind of hedge.

“What we do know from the filing is that they haven’t been sellers since I think the end of 2024, Bloomberg Technology co-host Edward Ludlow said in an interview on Bloomberg Crypto. “The idea, probably based on the language in the filing, is that … They might just see it as a hedge against inflation, long-term asset, but most likely this sort of strategic reserve for its excess cash.”

From a corporate accounting perspective, perhaps the more relevant factor at play will be the wild price swings Bitcoin is known to have. 

“The real story for public investors isn’t whether SpaceX sells or holds. It’s the accounting volatility. Marking $1.45 billion in Bitcoin to market each quarter can produce wild swings into reported earnings that have nothing to do with rocket launches or satellite performance,” Krause said.

‘A lot more than I thought they had’

Tesla and SpaceX having two of the largest corporate Bitcoin stashes stem in no small part from CEO Elon Musk’s personal fondness for crypto. The billionaire was particularly involved in crypto during the 2021 bull run, often tweeting about Dogecoin and, for a short time, accepting Bitcoin for car purchases. 

In recent years, Musk has talked less about cryptocurrency in public, as his companies have sold some of their holdings. During the trial for his lawsuit against OpenAI, Musk said some cryptocurrencies have merit, but most are scams. Still, the revelation of SpaceX’s Bitcoin holdings showed Musk’s companies have much more exposure to the currency than previously thought. 

“It’s a lot more than I thought they had (like everyone else),” Bloomberg analyst James Seyffart told Fortune in a text. Despite Musk’s apparent cooling toward crypto, Seyffart said, “he and/or someone higher up in his close circle are obviously strong believers in bitcoin to buy and hold through all this volatility.”

After SpaceX’s IPO, it will be the seventh-largest public company by Bitcoin holdings. If SpaceX and Tesla were to merge without selling any Bitcoin, the resulting company would be the fifth-largest public company by Bitcoin holdings.

Disclaimer : This story is auto aggregated by a computer programme and has not been created or edited by DOWNTHENEWS. Publisher: fortune.com