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#Crypto #WallStreet
In recent years, if you’ve been hanging around in crypto circles or U.S. stock forums, you might have noticed a strange phenomenon: some publicly listed companies — originally with nothing to do with crypto — suddenly announce that they’ve “bought Bitcoin” or “hold Ethereum,” even going as far as putting crypto assets directly on their balance sheet.
And the stock price? Some have shot up 200% or even 300% in a single day — like they’ve been injected with adrenaline. This is what’s called “crypto-stock linkage” — when stories from the stock market and the crypto world merge, they spark a brand-new valuation logic.
The question is — does this represent a new wealth opportunity, or just another bubble inflated by sentiment that’s bound to burst? In fact, this kind of hype is nothing new in the stock market. When a particular traditional sector heats up, many listed companies jump on the bandwagon, announcing they’re going to “get involved” or “develop projects” in that hot area, and the stock goes wild. But in equities, we generally treat this kind of rise as a “sentiment bubble.”
This time, though, it’s different. When the hot sector in question is another global financial market, the nature of the game changes — from hype-chasing to “linkage.” Next, let’s break down this so-called “wealth code” from four angles: model, drivers, risks, and trends.

In the simplest terms: a company uses real money to buy crypto, or allows a crypto project to go public via a backdoor listing, so that the stock price and the token price move together.
“Crypto” means Bitcoin, Ethereum, SOL, BNB, and other cryptocurrencies.
“Stock” refers to publicly traded equities on markets like the Nasdaq, NYSE, or Hong Kong Stock Exchange.
Strictly speaking, though, “crypto-stock linkage” is not just “a listed company buys some crypto.” It’s more like a cross-market capital narrative project. In the traditional equity market, capital flows usually depend on earnings growth, M&A, or industry cycles. But the volatility and high elasticity of the crypto market offer the stock market a new story template — once you anchor yourself to the price expectations of a trending crypto, you’ve essentially hitched yourself to a massive, 24/7, global market cycle.
The appeal of this model lies in the fact that stock market valuations and crypto market movements can amplify each other: when the token price rises, investors place a higher premium on the “crypto-holding company’s” stock; conversely, the stock price rise boosts the company’s financing ability, which it can then use to buy more crypto — creating a short-term, high-impact capital flywheel.
However, this linkage also doubles the volatility risk — these companies not only endure the inherent swings of crypto prices, but also face “double-kill” risk from changes in market sentiment, regulation, or liquidity. That’s why, although “crypto-stock linkage” is hot, very few companies survive long-term — most are fleeting speculative stories.
MicroStrategy (MSTR) — Originally an enterprise software company, later went all-in on Bitcoin, at one point holding 3% of BTC’s total supply.
BitMine (BMNR) & SharpLink Gaming (SBET) — One holds 830,000 ETH, the other 520,000 ETH — becoming “Ethereum versions” of MicroStrategy.
Some companies even hold SOL, BNB, XRP, and other multi-chain assets, letting their stock prices ride the same roller coaster as crypto.
Main play styles:
Using own funds / raising capital to buy crypto (BTC, ETH, etc.)
Crypto project backdoor listings (project team acquires a shell company, takes over as executives)
Entering crypto-related business (mining, issuing stablecoins, doing RWA, etc.)
Pure concept hype (issuing announcements with big promises but no real action)
Both sides have strong incentives.
For listed companies:
Pump the stock price — add a “crypto-holding” label, and the stock can skyrocket in the short term.
Easier financing — a higher stock price makes secondary offerings more lucrative, and the funds can be recycled into buying more crypto, keeping the flywheel spinning.
Selling the shell — empty shell companies can use this as a revaluation method.
For crypto projects:
Capital platform — financing via Nasdaq or HKEX is far more powerful than pure crypto funding.
Brand endorsement — ringing the Nasdaq bell is a dream for many teams.
In the traditional stock market, market cap is driven by:
Profitability
Balance sheet structure
Growth potential
Free cash flow
For crypto-stock linkage companies, there’s an additional dimension — the price expectation of their crypto holdings.
Example: if a company’s balance sheet suddenly includes 10,000 BTC, and the market believes BTC is going up, the stock price often reacts as a magnified version of the BTC price move — because stocks inherently carry financing and liquidity leverage.
It’s like adding a “crypto price option” to the valuation — and in bullish sentiment, that option can multiply several times over.
Cango (CANG) — In 2023, announced entry into Bitcoin mining, spending $400 million on hashpower. Stock price jumped 280% instantly.
Upexi (UPXI) — Raised $100 million to buy SOL; stock price soared, but later plunged 61% in a single day due to massive share sales.
Circle (USDC issuer) — Stock surged to nearly $300 after listing, but early backer Ark Invest kept selling.
The pattern is clear: it can drive the stock short-term, but long-term sustainability depends on whether the company can keep buying crypto or deliver fresh bullish catalysts.
Many people only see the gains of crypto-stock linkage but forget it’s essentially a leveraged bet on crypto price moves.
Common risks:
Market cap traps — frequent secondary offerings dilute shares; you may think market cap is $50M, but post-offering it’s actually $1B.
Lack of earnings support — few make money from core operations; most rely on sentiment. Once sentiment fades, it’s “double-kill” for stock and token.
High-leverage volatility — a 10% drop in token price could mean a 30–50% stock price drop.
Death spiral — token price drops → forced liquidations → stock price drops → financing fails → trust collapse.
More tokens involved — from BTC, ETH, SOL, BNB to XRP, DOGE, TRX, TON, SUI, and more.
U.S. stocks as the main battlefield — highest liquidity and global attention; HKEX remains appealing for Asia-based projects.
Regulation will catch up — once systemic risks emerge, the SEC, HK SFC, and others will step in.
From a third-party perspective, crypto-stock linkage is neither a pure scam nor a guaranteed win — it’s more like a narrative + leverage combo investment tool.
If you can accurately predict crypto price trends, choose companies with strong execution and financing abilities, and control your position size, this could yield higher returns than simply buying tokens. But if you just jump in because of hype, ignoring share dilution, earnings reports, and sentiment shifts, then what you’re buying may simply be the bag someone else is about to dump.
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#Crypto #WallStreet
In recent years, if you’ve been hanging around in crypto circles or U.S. stock forums, you might have noticed a strange phenomenon: some publicly listed companies — originally with nothing to do with crypto — suddenly announce that they’ve “bought Bitcoin” or “hold Ethereum,” even going as far as putting crypto assets directly on their balance sheet.
And the stock price? Some have shot up 200% or even 300% in a single day — like they’ve been injected with adrenaline. This is what’s called “crypto-stock linkage” — when stories from the stock market and the crypto world merge, they spark a brand-new valuation logic.
The question is — does this represent a new wealth opportunity, or just another bubble inflated by sentiment that’s bound to burst? In fact, this kind of hype is nothing new in the stock market. When a particular traditional sector heats up, many listed companies jump on the bandwagon, announcing they’re going to “get involved” or “develop projects” in that hot area, and the stock goes wild. But in equities, we generally treat this kind of rise as a “sentiment bubble.”
This time, though, it’s different. When the hot sector in question is another global financial market, the nature of the game changes — from hype-chasing to “linkage.” Next, let’s break down this so-called “wealth code” from four angles: model, drivers, risks, and trends.

In the simplest terms: a company uses real money to buy crypto, or allows a crypto project to go public via a backdoor listing, so that the stock price and the token price move together.
“Crypto” means Bitcoin, Ethereum, SOL, BNB, and other cryptocurrencies.
“Stock” refers to publicly traded equities on markets like the Nasdaq, NYSE, or Hong Kong Stock Exchange.
Strictly speaking, though, “crypto-stock linkage” is not just “a listed company buys some crypto.” It’s more like a cross-market capital narrative project. In the traditional equity market, capital flows usually depend on earnings growth, M&A, or industry cycles. But the volatility and high elasticity of the crypto market offer the stock market a new story template — once you anchor yourself to the price expectations of a trending crypto, you’ve essentially hitched yourself to a massive, 24/7, global market cycle.
The appeal of this model lies in the fact that stock market valuations and crypto market movements can amplify each other: when the token price rises, investors place a higher premium on the “crypto-holding company’s” stock; conversely, the stock price rise boosts the company’s financing ability, which it can then use to buy more crypto — creating a short-term, high-impact capital flywheel.
However, this linkage also doubles the volatility risk — these companies not only endure the inherent swings of crypto prices, but also face “double-kill” risk from changes in market sentiment, regulation, or liquidity. That’s why, although “crypto-stock linkage” is hot, very few companies survive long-term — most are fleeting speculative stories.
MicroStrategy (MSTR) — Originally an enterprise software company, later went all-in on Bitcoin, at one point holding 3% of BTC’s total supply.
BitMine (BMNR) & SharpLink Gaming (SBET) — One holds 830,000 ETH, the other 520,000 ETH — becoming “Ethereum versions” of MicroStrategy.
Some companies even hold SOL, BNB, XRP, and other multi-chain assets, letting their stock prices ride the same roller coaster as crypto.
Main play styles:
Using own funds / raising capital to buy crypto (BTC, ETH, etc.)
Crypto project backdoor listings (project team acquires a shell company, takes over as executives)
Entering crypto-related business (mining, issuing stablecoins, doing RWA, etc.)
Pure concept hype (issuing announcements with big promises but no real action)
Both sides have strong incentives.
For listed companies:
Pump the stock price — add a “crypto-holding” label, and the stock can skyrocket in the short term.
Easier financing — a higher stock price makes secondary offerings more lucrative, and the funds can be recycled into buying more crypto, keeping the flywheel spinning.
Selling the shell — empty shell companies can use this as a revaluation method.
For crypto projects:
Capital platform — financing via Nasdaq or HKEX is far more powerful than pure crypto funding.
Brand endorsement — ringing the Nasdaq bell is a dream for many teams.
In the traditional stock market, market cap is driven by:
Profitability
Balance sheet structure
Growth potential
Free cash flow
For crypto-stock linkage companies, there’s an additional dimension — the price expectation of their crypto holdings.
Example: if a company’s balance sheet suddenly includes 10,000 BTC, and the market believes BTC is going up, the stock price often reacts as a magnified version of the BTC price move — because stocks inherently carry financing and liquidity leverage.
It’s like adding a “crypto price option” to the valuation — and in bullish sentiment, that option can multiply several times over.
Cango (CANG) — In 2023, announced entry into Bitcoin mining, spending $400 million on hashpower. Stock price jumped 280% instantly.
Upexi (UPXI) — Raised $100 million to buy SOL; stock price soared, but later plunged 61% in a single day due to massive share sales.
Circle (USDC issuer) — Stock surged to nearly $300 after listing, but early backer Ark Invest kept selling.
The pattern is clear: it can drive the stock short-term, but long-term sustainability depends on whether the company can keep buying crypto or deliver fresh bullish catalysts.
Many people only see the gains of crypto-stock linkage but forget it’s essentially a leveraged bet on crypto price moves.
Common risks:
Market cap traps — frequent secondary offerings dilute shares; you may think market cap is $50M, but post-offering it’s actually $1B.
Lack of earnings support — few make money from core operations; most rely on sentiment. Once sentiment fades, it’s “double-kill” for stock and token.
High-leverage volatility — a 10% drop in token price could mean a 30–50% stock price drop.
Death spiral — token price drops → forced liquidations → stock price drops → financing fails → trust collapse.
More tokens involved — from BTC, ETH, SOL, BNB to XRP, DOGE, TRX, TON, SUI, and more.
U.S. stocks as the main battlefield — highest liquidity and global attention; HKEX remains appealing for Asia-based projects.
Regulation will catch up — once systemic risks emerge, the SEC, HK SFC, and others will step in.
From a third-party perspective, crypto-stock linkage is neither a pure scam nor a guaranteed win — it’s more like a narrative + leverage combo investment tool.
If you can accurately predict crypto price trends, choose companies with strong execution and financing abilities, and control your position size, this could yield higher returns than simply buying tokens. But if you just jump in because of hype, ignoring share dilution, earnings reports, and sentiment shifts, then what you’re buying may simply be the bag someone else is about to dump.
Press enter or click to view image in full size

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