A few months ago, treasuries composed of digital assets were the most sought-after trade in crypto. Driven by skyrocketing valuations, numerous companies scrambled to acquire Bitcoin, Ether, and other digital currencies.
However, in recent weeks, the excitement has diminished. Firms that experienced a surge in their stock prices following announcements of significant crypto acquisitions are now seeing their valuations lag behind their crypto holdings.
Nevertheless, some companies remain resilient, boasting a market-cap-to-net-asset-value multiple (mNAV) that stays comfortably positive.
What’s their secret? In the LlamaU article below, the pseudonymous analyst Meta from DefiLlama delves into the factors influencing mNAV premiums, along with instances where these principles may falter. (Check out Meta’s previous article: What is mNAV? How to calculate and trade it? Your definitive guide to the metric for digital asset treasuries)
Digital Asset Treasuries (DATs) have evolved beyond merely holding cryptocurrencies—they are now employing leverage to actively enhance their holdings and valuations.
These entities are no longer just ‘hodl’ing tokens; they are engaged in a competitive game to amass wealth. DATs are trading against their market caps, transforming investor sentiment into financial resources and narratives that reinforce their value.
This emerging category of equity, dubbed Digital Asset Treasuries, represents the convergence of corporate finance and crypto reflexivity.
Their fundamentals rely on blockchain technology, their premiums are driven by narratives, and their strategies are systematic: acquire, invest, compound, and repeat.
What started as an experiment based on MicroStrategy’s Bitcoin acquisition strategy has blossomed into a wider movement encompassing Bitcoin, Ethereum, Solana, and others.
Currently, companies like SBET and BMNR have adeptly applied these reflexive strategies to areas such as staking yields, token diversification, and capital rotation, turning once-static balance sheets into dynamic market drivers.
mNAV = Fully Diluted Market Cap ÷ Treasury Value (USD)
1.0x → equity matches treasury value (fair valuation)
> 1.0x → investors pay a premium for leverage, yield, or access
If you’re unfamiliar with mNAV or seek a detailed breakdown of its calculation, start with “HYPE DAT Ecosystem: A Clean Case Study for mNAV”.
A premium can originate from narrative influences, structural elements, engineered tactics, or yield support. When these factors converge, mNAV transitions from a mere ratio to a reaction: creating a positive feedback loop between equity and treasury that converts sentiment into capital.
MicroStrategy set the benchmark for the DAT model; they established, refined, and advanced their methodology, making it the gold standard. Below is the official equity guidance slide from the company’s Exhibit 99.1 (August 2025):