Bold Billion-Dollar Bitcoin Bet: CEO Vows to Execute $1B Purchase in Single Blockbuster Bid
Talk about putting your money where your mouth is. A crypto CEO just doubled down on his bullish Bitcoin vision—pledging to drop a jaw-dropping $1 billion buy order in one shot.
No drip-feeding. No dollar-cost averaging. Just a single earth-shaking trade that'll send shockwaves through liquidity pools and Twitter feeds alike.
Wall Street analysts are already hyperventilating into their Excel sheets—because who needs prudent portfolio allocation when you've got diamond hands and a publicity stunt to execute?
One thing's certain: whether this moons or crashes, the blockchain doesn't lie. And neither do the screenshots.
Countdown Sparks Speculation
According to David Bailey, CEO of Bitcoin-native holding company Nakamoto, the countdown ran for more than 14 days and was extended by one day before the flagged execution window.
Based on reports, the public messaging mixed bravado with strategy: a headline figure of $1 billion was used first, then adjusted to about $760 million as filings and timing were clarified.
That gap — roughly $240 million — has become a focal point for investors and commentators trying to parse whether the stunt is mostly marketing or a firm trading plan.
Ever since getting into Bitcoin I’ve always had this dream of smash buying $1b of bitcoin in a single bid. Tomorrow that dream comes true.
Gotta start dreaming bigger
— David Bailey
$1.0mm/btc is the floor (@DavidFBailey) August 11, 2025
The Financing & The Merger
Reports have disclosed that the company reached its current public FORM after a merger with a Nasdaq-listed firm, and that the combined business announced up to $710 million in commitments to back its Bitcoin accumulation plan.
The deal also enabled the group to access public markets and list under a new ticker, positioning itself beside other public companies that hold large amounts of BTC on their balance sheets.
Public statements so far do not explain how a purchase near $760 million WOULD be executed, or whether the company will use an over-the-counter desk, a block trade, or a public exchange order.
That detail matters. A single large market order placed on an exchange could MOVE prices and create heavy slippage, while off-exchange methods are typically used to limit market impact.
Observers will be looking for any disclosures about trading partners, custody arrangements, or firm funding sources.
Comparison & ContextThe CEO has publicly praised well-known corporate Bitcoin buyers as role models, and he explicitly cited leading figures in the space as influences on the company’s strategy.
The combination of a public countdown and large stated sums has made the firm’s planned accumulation a talking point among investors and on industry message boards.
Whether the move is primarily about building a treasury or about raising visibility for a newly public company remains unclear.
Featured image from Flickr, chart from TradingView