Riot, MARA, and Nakamoto all disclosed meaningful Bitcoin sales during the first quarter, but the three moves were not the same trade. The story here is first-quarter Bitcoin sales, not a verdict on each company’s full-year Bitcoin strategy, because each company paired its sale with a different liquidity or balance-sheet objective.
Riot, MARA, and Nakamoto Bitcoin Sales: The Q1 Breakdown
This comparison stays narrow: Riot’s full quarter, MARA’s March transactions, and Nakamoto’s March treasury sale, rather than each company’s entire Bitcoin strategy.
Riot Platforms
Riot said on April 2, 2026 that it sold 3,778 BTC during the first quarter, generating $289.5 million in net proceeds at an average net sale price of $76,626 per Bitcoin.
The same update said Riot produced 1,473 BTC during the first quarter and ended the period with 15,680 BTC, including 5,802 restricted BTC. Against that 15,680 BTC balance, the sale reads more like treasury management than a full exit, which is the same pressure point behind Coinlive’s recent look at the Bitcoin miners cash crunch.
MARA Holdings
MARA disclosed on March 26, 2026 that it sold 15,133 BTC between March 4 and March 25, 2026 for approximately $1.1 billion.
MARA said those proceeds would fund note repurchase transactions expected to reduce outstanding convertible indebtedness by about 30%, making this the clearest balance-sheet repair trade of the three companies.
Nakamoto
Nakamoto’s March 2026 Form 10-K said it sold approximately 284 Bitcoin in March for about $20 million.
Nakamoto said the sale created a dedicated U.S. dollar operating reserve for strategic initiatives, integration activities, and operating expenses, which separates it from MARA’s debt-focused move and Riot’s production-linked sale.
Why Did Riot, MARA, and Nakamoto Sell So Much Bitcoin?
Riot’s 15,680 BTC quarter-end balance, MARA’s planned 30% cut to convertible debt, and Nakamoto’s roughly $20 million reserve build point to three different treasury objectives. That is why these first-quarter sales look more like liquidity and balance-sheet decisions than a shared bearish call on BTC.
Liquidity, debt, and treasury posture
Nakamoto’s roughly $20 million operating reserve is the cleanest cash-buffer example, while Riot’s ongoing production of 1,473 BTC shows it was still replenishing inventory even as it sold. MARA, by contrast, explicitly tied its $1.1 billion sale to liability management, a distinction that also fits Coinlive’s broader discussion of institutional Bitcoin access in Charles Schwab’s new crypto offering.
What These Q1 Bitcoin Sales Could Mean for the Crypto Market
The cleaner sector signal is that public crypto companies are using Bitcoin inventories as active corporate finance tools. Riot still held 15,680 BTC after its sale, and Nakamoto paired its reserve build with an explicit statement that it still views Bitcoin as a long-term strategic asset.
That measured reading also fits Coinlive’s April 4 market wrap and its Extreme Fear market read, both of which frame the current backdrop as risk-off without proving that these company sales directly caused Bitcoin weakness. What matters next is whether upcoming miner and treasury disclosures look more like MARA’s financing move or Riot’s operating cash generation.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.








