Strive, Inc. (Nasdaq: ASST) bought 18 bitcoin last week, a small increase that raised the Dallas-based company’s net worth to 19,900, according to the 8-K. reservation and the Securities and Exchange Commission on Monday.
The purchases ran from July 6 to July 10 at an average price of about $64,028 per bitcoin, including fees and charges, for a total of $1.2 million. The purchase is close to what Strive has done earlier this year, and follows bitcoin’s price which has fallen below the levels the company has previously paid.
Along with shopping, Practice They reported $154.1 million in revenue as of July 10, up $700,000 from July 2. The firm still owns 505,000 shares of Strategy’s Variable Rate Series A Perpetual Stretch Preferred Stock, known as STRC, with a net value of $44.2 million, down from $0.202.
His preferred stock, Variable Rate Series A Perpetual Preferred Stock which trades as SATA, still has 7.83 million shares.
Strive’s leap from wealth manager to investment firm
Try to follow his bitcoin path in the rapid movement that started last year. Vivek Ramaswamy and Anson Frericks was established Practice Asset Management in 2022, and in 2025 the company merged with Asset Entities, taking the ASST ticker and re-establishing itself as the first bitcoin asset management company. The goal is to accumulate bitcoin and win the wealth over time.
The accumulation came with a bang. Practice he bought it 1,567 bitcoin by the end of 2025 for an average of $103,315 and supported the project through their favorite donations. In January 2026, it added 123 more for $91,561 and won the approval of the owners of Semler Scientific to buy all the products that will bring about 5,048 bitcoin to its balance sheet.
The combined company would have about 12,800 shares at the time, all of which would rank among the largest companies and put it ahead of names like Tesla and Trump Media. As of May 1, Strive’s assets reached 15,000 bitcoin.
A small part of the market
Monday’s post shows a different pace. The purchase of 18 coins at $ 64,028 is different from the six prices that Strive paid a few months ago, a difference that indicates a significant decline in bitcoin through the first half of the year.
The measured increase, combined with the income that was close to $154 million, points to the company that is gradually increasing its position while working through the Semler agreement.




