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Topic: First U.S. publicly traded company to run validator nodes on Ethereum 2.0 (Read 33 times)

jr. member
Activity: 125
Merit: 5


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Is this a smart move by these companies or is it better to store them in other less-volatile assets?

Yeah, if you look at how MicroStrategy has done it - he bought his Bitcoins at an average of $24,000~$26,000 and just recently bought $15m worth at $57m. Big companies are STILL buying it and it's not too late for other companies to use their cash reserves into Bitcoin instead of a dead fiat.
jr. member
Activity: 149
Merit: 1
An early pioneer in blockchain technology, BTCS in 2014 was the first U.S. public company to mine bitcoin. Then, in 2017, BTCS created a first of its kind digital asset treasury strategy which is now being widely employed by companies such as Tesla, Square, and MicroStrategy. Now, BTCS is the first U.S. public company to run validator nodes on ethereum 2.0. We see this strategy as driving strong near-term revenue growth with the added benefit of being more profitable than traditional bitcoin mining while also enabling additional future revenue-generating services.

Over seven years as a public company, BTCS has been on the cutting edge of the blockchain technology sector,” said Charles Allen, Chief Executive Officer of BTCS. “Now we have a balance sheet with over $2.8 million in cash and approximately $9 million in crypto-currencies to execute on our vision.

“Our transaction verification services operation should drive strong near-term revenue growth,” continued Allen. “We believe in the future of ‘smart-crypto’ and see ethereum, which is transitioning to a proof-of-stake consensus algorithm, as the flagship of smart-crypto blockchains. Less resource intensive than proof-of-work verification services, proof-of-stake validation provides attractive economics. Our goal is to build a growing network of BTCS actively operated validators, ultimately positioning us to offer additional services in the future.”

IMO, I'm glad that the time has finally come where institutions and publicly traded companies are already seeing crypto (mainly BTC & ETH) as a digital asset treasury and a better way to put their cash reserves.

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Is this a smart move by these companies or is it better to store them in other less-volatile assets?
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