KULR Buys Another $8M of Bitcoin, Taking Total Holdings to 510 BTC

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By James Van Straten|Edited by Sheldon Reback

Updated Jan 21, 2025, 8:54 a.m. UTCPublished Jan 21, 2025, 1:30 p.m. UTC

KULR expands bitcoin holdings to 510 BTC (Jacco Rienks, Unsplash)

What to know:

  • KULR spent $8 million buying more bitcoin.
  • The energy-management systems maker now holds 510 BTC, having spent a total of $50 million.
  • It said it had achieved a year-to-date bitcoin yield of 127%.

KULR (KULR), a maker of advanced energy-management systems, said it spent $8 million on bitcoin (BTC) to take its total holdings to 510 tokens.

At a weighted average price of $101,695, that equates to almost 79 bitcoin and means the company’s total investment is now $50 million.

The purchase follows the Houston, Texas-based company’s Dec. 4 announcement that it will invest some of its surplus cash in the largest cryptocurrency as the adoption of bitcoin treasury for public companies gathers steam.

The company has achieved a bitcoin yield of 127% so far this year, it said in a statement shared with CoinDesk. The yield is the percentage change in the ratio of its bitcoin holdings to its full-diluted shares outstanding over a given period.

Since the investment strategy was announced, the company’s NYSE-traded shares have soared 90%, while bitcoin has added 7%. They closed Friday at $2.28 and were up 2.2% in pre-market trading Tuesday.

James Van Straten is a Senior Analyst at CoinDesk, specializing in Bitcoin and its interplay with the macroeconomic environment. Previously, James worked as a Research Analyst at Saidler & Co., a Swiss hedge fund, where he developed expertise in on-chain analytics. His work focuses on monitoring flows to analyze Bitcoin’s role within the broader financial system.
In addition to his professional endeavors, James serves as an advisor to Coinsilium, a UK publicly traded company, where he provides guidance on their Bitcoin treasury strategy. He also holds investments in Bitcoin, MicroStrategy (MSTR), and Semler Scientific (SMLR).

Picture of CoinDesk author James Van Straten

 

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