Most crypto treasury firms do one thing. They buy a token and sit on it.
Avalanche Treasury Co. wants to do more. It started trading on the Nasdaq on Thursday under the ticker AVAT.
The Crypto Treasury Trade Is Changing
Crypto treasury firms boomed last year on a simple idea. A public company loads up on one coin, and its stock turns into an easy way to bet on that coin's price.
Then prices fell, and that simple bet stopped looking special. So newer firms are trying to stand out.
Avalanche Treasury Co. is one of them. It is run by Bart Smith, who used to trade on Wall Street.
The firm got to the Nasdaq through a SPAC merger. A SPAC is a shell company that lists first, then merges with a real business to take it public.
We explain crypto moves like this in plain English every morning in Market Briefs, and joining comes with a free investing masterclass.
What Makes This One Different
Most treasury firms just hold their coin and wait. Avalanche Treasury Co. wants to put its money to work.
It plans to spread cash across the Avalanche network and earn staking income. Staking means locking up tokens to help run the network in exchange for rewards.
The firm already holds about 15 million AVAX tokens. That is roughly 3.5% of all the AVAX in the market.
AVAX is one of the larger coins out there, sitting around the 33rd spot by value. That gives the firm real size to work with.
One early backer summed up the pitch. The firm gives big investors a clean, regulated way to bet on the whole Avalanche network, not just the coin.
Why Avalanche
Avalanche is not aimed mainly at day traders. The six-year-old network was built for businesses.
The goal is to move real things like bonds and funds onto the blockchain. There they can trade faster and cost less to handle.
The company behind it, Ava Labs, has chased big institutions for years. It pushed to put real assets onchain while much of finance was still unsure.
Its user list reads like a finance who's who. It includes BlackRock, Franklin Templeton, Apollo, and even FIFA and the state of Wyoming.
That base is large. The network now hosts about 550 projects and more than $1.65 billion in real assets turned into tokens.
That track record is the firm's main selling point. It is betting that the businesses already on Avalanche will keep growing.
Worth Noting
AVAT is a test of one big question. Can a treasury firm do more than just hold a coin?
The first ones acted like savings accounts, where you park the coin and wait. This one wants to act like an investor.
The downturn in crypto prices is what forced the change. Just holding a coin stopped being enough to stand out.
The Nasdaq will price that difference in real time.
If you want crypto and markets decoded every weekday morning, sign up for Market Briefs here - you also get a free 45-minute investing course as a bonus.
