For decades, the hidden mountain nation of Bhutan maintained a hidden treasure within its borders. With abundant sources of clean electric power from large hydroelectric stations, Bhutan began quietly accumulating value in the form of BTC by producing thousands of bitcoins through the foreign and experimental banking process of mining. Bhutan has gone from being a small country without access to global, state-sponsored cryptocurrency assets, to being one of the top nine state-owned holders of the cryptocurrency. But that may soon change as things begin to play out differently. Bhutan is aggressively cashing out, signaling what might be the end of its ambitious digital gold rush.
The End of a Sovereign Experiment?
According to recent blockchain data provided by Arkham Intelligence, Bhutan has sold off a staggering 70 percent of its Bitcoin reserves over the last eighteen months. The state-owned investment arm, Druk Holding and Investments, originally started this mining journey back in 2019. By October 2024, the nation sat on an impressive mountain of roughly 13,000 Bitcoin. Fast forward to the present, and that digital reserve has significantly diminished, resulting in the kingdom holding just below 3,800 tokens.
Following the Money Trail
The rate at which liquidations are taking place is increasing. Some market analysts estimate that an excess of $215 million worth of Bitcoin was moved out through the national wallets in 2026.
Just hours ago, another 250 coins were moved to exchanges to be sold. Perhaps the most telling detail is the complete absence of new mining revenue. Data shows that Bhutan has not recorded a single mining inflow above the $100,000 mark in over a year. This prolonged silence has sparked intense speculation among market watchers that the country officially ceased its hydropower-backed mining operations late last year.
A Broader Industry Sell-Off
Bhutan is certainly not acting alone. The kingdom’s massive liquidation coincides with a heavy wave of selling across the broader digital asset sector. Major publicly traded mining companies and corporate treasuries are actively reducing their exposure. For example, mining giant MARA recently sold over 15,000 Bitcoin—worth roughly $1.1 billion—between early and late March just to repurchase convertible notes. Similarly, Riot Platforms offloaded nearly 3,800 coins during the first quarter of 2026, pulling in nearly $290 million.
Smaller Players Feel the Squeeze
The pressure to secure cash is also hitting smaller corporate players. Earlier this month, Cango dumped 2,000 Bitcoin to wipe out outstanding loans backed by the digital asset. Even more drastically, Genius Group was forced to liquidate its entire treasury of about 84 coins on April 1 to settle an $8.5 million debt obligation. Meanwhile, Nakamoto Holdings sold off approximately 284 coins last month, taking a realized loss relative to their average purchase price just to secure immediate liquidity.
The Lone Accumulator Standing
At the same time that miners and sovereign funds, including Bhutan, are rushing towards the exit; one very large corporate whale is moving the opposite direction. MicroStrategy remains the undeniable outlier in this market environment. Rather than selling, the software company went on another historic buying spree, scooping up over 44,000 Bitcoin in March alone. As the rest of the industry cashes in their chips to cover debts and realize profits, MicroStrategy’s total holdings have ballooned to an incredible 766,970 coins, proving that conviction in the digital asset market remains fiercely divided.
