MARA’s holdings position it as the second-largest public corporate holder of Bitcoin, with a treasury valued at over $5.4 billion based on recent market prices. This places the company behind only Strategy (formerly MicroStrategy) in terms of publicly disclosed corporate Bitcoin reserves and demonstrates a defined accumulation strategy.
Data shows this shift is impacting market supply, with exchange balances reaching multi-year lows. The reduction in Bitcoin available for immediate trade is often associated with long-term holding strategies. This trend of miners retaining assets could constrict available supply as demand from instruments like spot ETFs continues.
In a recent announcement, MARA’s Chairman and CEO, Fred Thiel, commented on the company’s operational focus.
He elaborated that this model is intended to provide tighter operational control and improve cost-efficiency. In a June 3 update, Thiel noted record-breaking production in May, where the company produced 950 BTC, the most since the April 2024 halving event.
This competition for power resources could reshape mining economics, potentially favoring large-scale, vertically integrated operators with secure and low-cost energy contracts.
The financial implications of MARA’s Bitcoin-heavy balance sheet will be a central point of interest for investors during its upcoming second-quarter earnings report, which Nasdaq data estimates will be released in August.
Analysts currently have a consensus earnings per share forecast of $-0.41 for the quarter ending in June.