A lot of investors assumed GameStop was building a standard corporate Bitcoin treasury: buy BTC, hold it, and let the market treat the stock as a partial Bitcoin proxy.
Nah. That is not what the company actually did. According to GameStop’s latest disclosures, it pledged 4,709 of its 4,710 Bitcoin into a covered call strategy through Coinbase Prime and Coinbase Credit, using almost the entire position to generate income rather than simply sitting on it. When you check the dictionary for what YOLO means, this is it.
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In plain English, GameStop kept economic exposure to Bitcoin while selling call options against it.
That gave the company premium income upfront, but it also put a ceiling on how much upside it can keep if Bitcoin rallies hard above the agreed strike prices.
This is a much more active and finance-heavy treasury strategy than the one most people associate with corporate Bitcoin buyers.
How the trade works
GameStop originally bought 4,710 BTC for about $500 million in May 2025.
In the fourth quarter of fiscal 2025, it entered into a collateral agreement with Coinbase Credit and transferred 4,709 BTC to Coinbase Prime as part of an over-the-counter covered call strategy.
The calls reportedly had strike prices between $105,000 and $110,000 per Bitcoin and were set to expire in late March 2026.
Covered calls are simple in concept even if they sound technical. You own the asset, then you sell someone else the right to buy it from you later at a fixed price.
If the asset stays below that price, you keep the premium and still own the asset. If it rises above the strike, your upside is capped because the buyer can exercise the option.
For GameStop, that means the company is effectively betting that Bitcoin will stay below those strike levels for long enough to make the premium income worth the trade-off.
Why this is different
This shows corporate Bitcoin strategies are already starting to diverge. Some companies want pure upside exposure and are happy to let Bitcoin just sit on the balance sheet.
GameStop chose something closer to treasury management: hold the Bitcoin, use it as collateral, and turn it into an income-producing position.
That choice also changed the accounting treatment. Because Coinbase had broad rights over the pledged Bitcoin under the collateral agreement, GameStop had to remove those 4,709 BTC from direct digital assets on its balance sheet and instead record a digital-assets receivable, which was valued at about $368.3 million at the end of January 2026.
The company still had direct custody of only 1 BTC. So even though GameStop still has economic exposure, the structure is a lot more complex than a simple treasury holding.
The hidden trade-offs
This strategy does generate yield, but it is not a free lunch. If Bitcoin runs sharply higher (quite unlikely given today’s market structure), GameStop gives up part of the upside because the calls can be exercised at the fixed strike price.
If Bitcoin stays flat or lower, the company keeps the premium and still benefits from holding the position.
There is also counterparty and collateral complexity here. GameStop’s filing says Coinbase has rights to rehypothecate, commingle, or even sell the pledged Bitcoin under the agreement, which is a reminder that once treasury assets are used inside structured trades, they are no longer just sitting safely in reserve.
That added complexity helps explain why the company reported a $131.6 million loss tied to digital assets and related receivables during fiscal 2025, driven in part by derecognition effects and Bitcoin’s price decline after the pledge.
What retail should take away
The real takeaway here is that “corporate Bitcoin treasury” no longer means one thing. The old question was whether public companies would buy Bitcoin at all.
Yes? We are impressed. No? We are not impressed. Now the more interesting question is what they do with it afterward: hold it, borrow against it, hedge it, or use it to produce income.
GameStop’s move suggests the next phase of corporate Bitcoin adoption may have less to do with conviction slogans and more to do with financial engineering.
Cryptocurrency and Web3 expert, founder of Kriptoworld
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With years of experience covering the blockchain space, András delivers insightful reporting on DeFi, tokenization, altcoins, and crypto regulations shaping the digital economy.
📅 Published: March 30, 2026 • 🕓 Last updated: March 30, 2026
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