According to reports, the fund was set up through a private placement that issued 175,000,420 pre-funded warrants priced at $1 each, a structure meant to provide immediate capital for purchases. The plan has drawn big-name crypto firms and traditional investors.
The offering is expected to close around September 4, 2025, subject to regulatory approvals and the formal listing of the new warrants.
The company tied to the move is CleanCore Solutions, which will house the program alongside a commercial arm called House of Doge.
Markets reacted fast. CleanCore’s share price fell about 60%, sliding from roughly $6.85 to near $2.69 after the arrangement was disclosed.
That drop reflected investor worries about dilution, execution risk, and how public markets would view a corporate play centered on a meme token.
Trading in the warrants and the conversion mechanics were flagged by analysts as key details investors will watch closely.
Timothy Stebbing, Director at the Dogecoin Foundation and CTO of House of Doge, will join CleanCore’s board, while Marco Margiotta, CEO of House of Doge, is slated to act as CleanCore’s Chief Investment Officer.
The crypto-ETF firm 21Shares will advise on governance, capital allocation and strategy for the treasury. Those moves were described in filings and press releases tied to the deal.
According to statements circulating with the financing documents, the treasury would buy DOGE with the raised capital and could help create institutional-grade products around the token.
Details about custody, trading rules and how purchases will be executed were not fully spelled out in initial disclosures.
Featured image from Meta, chart from TradingView