February 05, 2025
11 11 11 AM
Latest Post
Bitcoin Risks Losing the $90K- $110K Range as These 3 Development Could Put the Brakes on the Next Bull Breakout Bitdeer Buys 101 MW Gas Power Plant in Alberta, Canada for BTC Mining Regulation By Enforcement Is Out at CFTC, Acting Chair Pham Says Bitcoin Extends Losses to Below $97K Following David Sacks Press Conference SEC Commissioner Hester Peirce Lays Out 10 Priorities for New Crypto Task Force Bitcoin OP_CAT Proposal Gets Boost From Taproot Wizards’ $30M Fundraise Acting SEC Chair Uyeda Names 3 Appointees to Agency’s New Crypto Task Force Trump’s Crypto Czar Sacks Says ‘Golden Age’ Coming The DeepSeek-R1 Effect and Web3-AI Sol Strategies Bolsters Solana Holdings to Near 190,000 SOL Worth More Than $40M

Microsoft Shareholders Vote Down Bitcoin Treasury Proposal

Microsoft (MSFT) doesn’t appear to be adding its name anytime soon to the list of corporate entities holding bitcoin (BTC) after its shareholders voted against a proposal that would have directed the board of directors to study such a move.

Titled “Assessment of Investing in Bitcoin,” the proposal was put forward by the National Center for Public Policy Research. The think tank group suggested that Microsoft should consider diversifying 1% of its total assets into bitcoin as a potential hedge against inflation. According to the latest data by Bloomberg, Microsoft holds $78.4 billion of cash and marketable securities on its balance sheet.

The board last month had urged shareholders to vote against the proposal.

The preliminary vote result was announced minutes ago at the company’s annual meeting.

Shares of MSFT were trading for $446 in the minutes after the decision was announced, roughly flat for the day. Already under pressure on Tuesday, bitcoin prices fell a bit more following the news, now lower by 4% over the past 24 hours to $95,700.

Michael Saylor gets involved

A 3-minute presentation by Michael Saylor, executive chairman of Bitcoin Development Company MicroStrategy (MSTR), which has seen its stock price surge as much as 2,500% since adding bitcoin to the company’s treasury strategy more than four years ago, was meant to convince shareholders otherwise.

Saylor argued that Microsoft had surrendered $200 billion in capital over the past five years by issuing dividends and stock buybacks instead of purchasing bitcoin.

From the beginning, though, Microsoft’s board had concerns over bitcoin due to the inherent volatility of the asset. The company, according to the board, prioritizes stable and predictable investments to mitigate as much risk as possible.

This post was originally published on this site