- July 14, 2026
- Posted by: admin
- Category: BitCoin, Blockchain, Cryptocurrency, Investments
Public companies’ Bitcoin treasury reserves become something very different once pledged to lenders. They become collateral, measured against loan ratios that can force a company to post more Bitcoin, repay debt, or risk lender sale rights within hours.
That risk is no longer theoretical. Fold received a formal collateral-maintenance notice in February and posted 50 BTC. Empery Digital’s continuing loan crossed its collateral-call level and the company posted 576 BTC. Nakamoto separately posted 688 BTC to satisfy maintenance requirements.
Fold disclosed a formal lender notice. Empery and Nakamoto reported topping up collateral after hitting loan thresholds. However, there was no indication that either lender made a formal call. In addition, none of the companies CryptoSlate reviewed has reported a lender selling its pledged Bitcoin.
Bitcoin trades between $61,988 and $64,207 throughout July 14, making the price down 19-23% over 60 days. No filing says a 12- or 24-hour response clock is currently running as a result of the decline. Although, another threshold breach could turn a market move into an immediate liquidity decision.
Collateral pressure has already forced companies to act
Fold provides the clearest example of a formal demand. The company received a collateral-maintenance notice on Feb. 5 after Bitcoin fell below the threshold in its loan agreement. It posted another 50 BTC within the required notification period.
Fold reported $20 million outstanding and 430 BTC pledged at March 31. In June, it sold about $45 million of Bitcoin at an average price near $71,000 and repaid the full $20 million balance.
The company directed that sale and repayment.
Empery Digital’s filing uses different language. Its continuing Two Prime facility fell below its collateral-call level on Feb. 4, causing the company to post 576 BTC to restore coverage.
Six days later, Empery amended the loan. The new terms reduced its initial collateral ratio from 250% to 174%, its call level from 175% to 153% and its liquidation level from 150% to 143%.
Empery had $45 million outstanding and 1,096 BTC pledged under that agreement at March 31. Its July update again reported $45 million of debt after a voluntary $10 million repayment, but did not provide a new pledged-Bitcoin figure.
The company also said it had sold 1,400 BTC since May 7 at an average price of about $62,200, leaving it with 1,514 BTC and $73.9 million in cash. Those were company-directed treasury and repayment decisions, not a reported lender liquidation.
Nakamoto disclosed another form of collateral pressure. On Feb. 5, it posted 688 additional BTC to satisfy maintenance requirements on a 210 million USDT loan, bringing the pledged amount to about 4,405 BTC.
Nakamoto later refinanced the position. It sold roughly 600 BTC and exited derivatives positions, generating about $48 million in net proceeds. It used $45 million to reduce the loan to 165 million USDT, with the new facility initially secured by 3,805.112 BTC.
Its filing describes maintenance and liquidation thresholds without disclosing the numerical levels. That prevents a reliable calculation of how far Bitcoin would need to fall before another action was required.
The filings trace what can happen before liquidation. A lender flags a breach, the borrower adds collateral, then may sell assets, refinance or repay the debt.
Some contracts give borrowers only hours to respond
These agreements show how fast companies may need to move when their collateral cushion shrinks. Because each contract measures risk and gives notice differently, the headline ratios do not offer a like-for-like ranking.
| Company and facility | Latest disclosed debt and collateral | Contractual levels | Response and lender rights |
|---|---|---|---|
| USBC / Payward-Kraken | $15 million outstanding as of July 2; current pledged quantity not directly stated | 150% initial ratio; 130% call ratio; 120% collateral-remedy level | 24 hours after a call to add BTC or repay debt; lender remedies can apply at 120% or lower if the deficiency is not cured |
| Empery / Two Prime | $45 million outstanding as of July 10; 1,096 BTC pledged at March 31 but not updated in July | 174% initial ratio; 153% call ratio; 143% liquidation level | The 10-Q describes 12 hours to provide collateral at the liquidation level, while the loan amendment separately gives the lender sale rights after an automatic default |
| Hut 8 / FalconX Charlie | $200 million loan entered May 1; exact pledged quantity not disclosed | 143% initial ratio; 130% call ratio; 105% default level | 24 hours after a margin notice; at the default level, a qualifying certificate can delay action for no more than 12 hours or the time remaining in the original period |
USBC provides the clearest company-calculated buffer. It said the value of its pledged Bitcoin could have fallen another 18.2% from its July 2 level before reaching the 130% call ratio, assuming it neither repaid principal nor added collateral.
USBC also said no collateral call, mandatory repayment or liquidation event had occurred as of July 2. In fact, Bitcoin has risen around 5% since.
Its quarterly filing says the February amendment reduced the period for providing collateral at the liquidation level to 12 hours.
However, the filed loan amendment also says a breach of the 143% liquidation level automatically creates an event of default and permits the lender to sell collateral without notice. The disclosure does not support treating 12 hours as an unconditional grace period.
We can also look to Hut 8, adding another active facility with a short timetable. The company entered a $200 million FalconX Charlie loan on May 1 at 7%, using the proceeds to repay an earlier Coinbase facility.
The refinancing released roughly 3,300 BTC from the previous collateral arrangement, according to Hut 8’s quarterly filing. The company did not disclose the exact amount pledged under the new FalconX loan.
Under the FalconX agreement, a drop below the 130% call level allows the lender to issue a notice requiring funds or collateral within 24 hours.
At the 105% default level, a borrower that promptly provides the required officer certificate may receive a delay limited to the lesser of 12 hours or the time left in the original 24-hour period. If those conditions are not met, the lender’s rights can arise without that delay.
The clock matters before liquidation begins
The filings cannot tell us which borrower is nearest to a collateral call. They can show how quickly the pressure builds once coverage breaks.
A lack of standards in reporting metrics really muddies the playing field here.
USBC does not directly state its pledged-Bitcoin quantity. Empery’s last disclosed collateral amount is dated March 31 even though its debt was updated in July. Hut 8 does not disclose the exact amount securing its FalconX loan, while Nakamoto omits the numerical maintenance and liquidation thresholds.
Using those mismatched disclosures to produce Bitcoin trigger prices would create false precision. Repayments, collateral transfers, interest and contract-specific valuation rules can all change a company’s coverage without a matching move in Bitcoin’s spot price.
That does not make the contractual risk theoretical. A company receiving a notice will have to source cash, transfer more Bitcoin or repay debt within the applicable window. In some agreements, that decision can be measured in 12 or 24 hours.
The most important distinction is between forced response and lender liquidation. Fold, Empery and Nakamoto have already disclosed notices, threshold breaches or maintenance postings. They later sold assets, refinanced facilities or reduced debt, but the reviewed filings describe those as borrower actions.
A lender does not have to sell the pledged Bitcoin to tighten a company’s position. The loan itself can lock up more of the reserve, force a scramble for cash and turn a passive holding into an immediate liability.
The next meaningful signal will be a filing that reports a new notice, collateral transfer, repayment, threshold change or lender action.
Until then, corporate Bitcoin reserves can still remain untouched for years while they are unencumbered. However, once they back a loan, contractual ratios and response clocks determine how long the company has to act. And Bitcoin financing is becoming a thing, especially for miners trying to survive the winter.
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