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Markets

Empery Digital Offloads 1,400 BTC, Pivots Treasury From Bitcoin to AI Infrastructure

For months, corporate bitcoin treasuries have been treated as a one-way bet. Empery Digital just broke the pattern. The Nasdaq-listed firm disclosed in an SEC filing that it sold 1,400 bitcoi

AnonymousCryptoCompass newsroom
July 11, 2026
3 min read
NEWS
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For months, corporate bitcoin treasuries have been treated as a one-way bet. Empery Digital just broke the pattern. The Nasdaq-listed firm disclosed in an SEC filing that it sold 1,400 bitcoin since May, generating roughly $87.1 million at an average price of $62,200, according to the original report. The proceeds are marked for debt repayment, a previously announced property acquisition, and legal expenses.

The sale is not merely a capital raise. It coincides with a direct strategic pivot. Empery said it will discontinue public net asset value disclosures based exclusively on bitcoin holdings, citing growing exposure to artificial intelligence and energy infrastructure businesses. The firm is now involved in a proposed $1 billion AI data center project alongside members of the Hunt and Crow families.

A Corporate Treasury Reversal

While many public companies added bitcoin to their balance sheets in recent years, Empery’s move stands out because it was one of the earliest to formally brand itself as a bitcoin treasury. Now, it is unwinding that position. The average sale price of $62,200 suggests the disposals happened during a period of relative stability in bitcoin’s price, rather than from a forced liquidation spiral. Still, the choice to fund a real estate play and AI infrastructure with bitcoin proceeds sends a signal that the firm sees better near-term returns outside of crypto.

The AI data center project is ambitious but still at the proposal stage. Empery’s willingness to commit capital from its bitcoin treasury to this venture indicates that internal calculations now favor AI compute over digital gold. That is a meaningful shift for a company that once used bitcoin holdings as a core part of its market identity.

A sale of 1,400 BTC is not enough to disrupt order books on its own, but it reinforces a subtle trend. Corporate treasurers are beginning to treat bitcoin not as a permanent reserve asset but as a liquidity tool that can be tapped for more conventional corporate purposes. This contrasts sharply with the strategy of firms that have pledged never to sell. The long-term question is whether Empery’s move is an isolated case or a preview of what other Nasdaq-listed crypto holders might do when competing priorities emerge.

Meanwhile, the broader institutional landscape for digital assets is evolving rapidly beyond simple bitcoin accumulation. Real-world asset tokenization recently crossed $20 billion, signaling that corporate treasuries are increasingly exploring diversified on-chain exposures. At the same time, Nasdaq-listed firms are integrating crypto into their operations in more nuanced ways, as when a major holder began institutional staking on Sui earlier this year.

Regulatory Backdrop and What Remains Unclear

The strategic recalibration arrives while US crypto legislation is under intense pressure from banking interests. A landmark bill faces a potential derailment just days before a Senate vote, creating a climate where corporate treasuries must weigh regulatory uncertainty against any allocation thesis. For Empery, the regulatory noise may have made the AI pivot look even more rational.

Still, several things are not clear. The filing does not disclose Empery’s remaining bitcoin holdings, leaving open the question of whether this is a full exit or a partial rebalancing. The AI data center project, while ambitious, has not yet broken ground and will require far more capital than the $87.1 million raised. Until the project materializes, the sale remains a bet on future infrastructure demand, not a completed transformation. Market participants will watch Empery’s next quarterly filings closely to see if other corporate treasury managers follow its lead.