Why Did Capital B Seek Such A Large Fundraising Mandate?
France-listed Bitcoin treasury company Capital B has received shareholder approval to raise up to €105 billion, or about $120.4 billion, through new capital and credit instruments to fund future Bitcoin purchases.
The approval gives the company one of the most aggressive financing mandates in the European crypto treasury sector. More than 95% of shareholders backed authorizations for up to €5 billion in capital increases and up to €100 billion in credit instruments, giving management broad flexibility to raise funds if market conditions allow.
Capital B said the new instruments are intended to accelerate its Bitcoin accumulation strategy, with a focus on increasing the number of Bitcoin per fully diluted share over time. That metric is central to the company’s treasury model because shareholders are being asked to evaluate the business less like a traditional operating company and more like a listed Bitcoin accumulation vehicle.
The scale of the mandate does not mean the company will immediately raise the full amount. It gives Capital B optionality to issue shares, debt, or other credit instruments over time. Still, the size of the authorization shows how far some listed firms are willing to go in using public-market structures to expand Bitcoin exposure.
What Is The Dilution Risk For Existing Shareholders?
The capital increase authorization carries significant dilution risk. Capital B reported 300.65 million shares with voting rights at its general meeting. If the full €5 billion equity authorization were exercised at the current nominal value, the company could issue as many as 125 billion new shares.
That would leave existing shareholders with about 0.24% of the company’s ownership if the authorization were used in full. The figure highlights the central trade-off in Bitcoin treasury strategies: investors may gain exposure to a growing Bitcoin balance, but that exposure can be diluted if new capital is raised through large equity issuance.
For shareholders, the key question is whether each financing round increases Bitcoin per fully diluted share. If new shares are issued at terms that allow the company to buy enough Bitcoin to improve that metric, dilution may be offset by higher treasury value. If issuance expands the share count faster than Bitcoin accumulation improves per-share exposure, shareholders face weaker economics.
Capital B shares were little changed after the announcement, suggesting the market did not immediately treat the authorization as either a major positive catalyst or a sudden dilution shock. Investors may be waiting to see how much capital is actually raised, what instruments are used, and at what price.
Investor Takeaway
Capital B’s mandate gives management major financing flexibility, but the investment case now depends on execution. The company must show that future fundraising improves Bitcoin per fully diluted share rather than simply expanding the balance sheet through heavy shareholder dilution.
How Does Capital B Compare With Other Bitcoin Treasury Firms?
Capital B is Europe’s second-largest Bitcoin treasury company, holding 3,139 BTC valued at about $200 million. It ranks behind Germany-based Bitcoin Group SE, which holds 3,604 BTC worth about $230 million.
The company has already raised about $325 million in capital, including a recent $17.8 million raise from strategic investors such as Blockstream CEO Adam Back and Paris-based asset manager TOBAM. The new shareholder authorizations are designed to expand that funding capacity far beyond the amounts raised so far.
Shareholders also approved changing the company’s name from The Blockchain Group to Capital B, aligning the corporate name with the commercial brand adopted in 2025. The rebrand reinforces the company’s narrower identity as a Bitcoin treasury business rather than a broader blockchain-focused firm.
That narrower strategy may help investors understand the company’s purpose, but it also ties its valuation more directly to Bitcoin market cycles. A rising Bitcoin price can strengthen the treasury narrative and improve access to capital. A falling or sideways market can make equity issuance harder and increase pressure on the company’s per-share Bitcoin target.
Why Are Crypto Treasury Strategies Diverging?
Capital B’s plan contrasts with other companies that are reducing or actively managing crypto exposure. On May 28, France-based semiconductor company Sequans Communications said it had concluded its previously announced crypto treasury strategy. The company held 658 BTC and said it would monetize remaining holdings over time, a decision followed by a share price increase of about 14.5%.
The difference shows that listed-company Bitcoin strategies are no longer moving in one direction. Some firms are seeking larger mandates to accumulate more Bitcoin, while others are exiting or trimming exposure after testing the market response.
For investors, the distinction matters. A Bitcoin treasury strategy can create upside when capital markets reward accumulation and when new issuance increases Bitcoin exposure per share. It can also create governance and valuation risk when fundraising authority becomes large relative to the existing share base.
Capital B’s approval gives the company room to become a much larger European Bitcoin treasury vehicle. The next test is whether management can raise capital on terms that strengthen per-share exposure without making dilution the dominant part of the story.
