Strive, Inc., the investment company founded by Vivek Ramaswamy, reported that it has acquired 13,628 bitcoins as of March 17, 2026, placing the company among the top 10 companies in the world.
The increase came nearly six months after Strive’s September 2025 listing, even though the company posted a GAAP net loss of $393.6 million for the period ended December 31, 2025.
Most of the Strive bitcoin data came from a number of sources. Private equity funds and stock exchange services contributed 5,886 bitcoin, respectively find Semler Scientific, Inc. added about 5,048 bitcoin, the company he said.
Semler Scientific developed its own your digital database before buying. Another 2,694 bitcoins came from capital markets, including offerings of Strive’s Variable Rate Series A Perpetual Preferred Stock (“SATA”), follow-on offerings, and market releases.
Practice losses
Strive’s financial reports highlighted the tension between economic growth and market volatility. All of the company’s GAAP loss came from non-cash items. Unrealized losses on the bitcoin business accounted for $194.5 million, or about 50 percent of the total GAAP loss.
Impairment of goodwill and intangible assets acquired by Semler added $140.8 million, and event-related expenses contributed $12.4 million. Adjusted for these items, the company’s non-GAAP loss attributable to common stockholders decreased to $208.2 million, or $4.73 per diluted share.
The management introduced its own metric, “Bitcoin Yield,” to measure its financial performance. With that measure, Strive reported a yield of 22.2 percent in Q4 2025 and 13.8 percent until mid-March 2026, which corresponds to a bitcoin profit of 1,305 and 1,050, respectively. In dollar terms, these profits were adjusted to $ 114.3 million and $ 78.2 million in the same period.
The company supported its bitcoin strategy mainly through financial products. It aims to raise $148.4 million in net proceeds from its initial public offering of SATA preferred in November 2025, priced at $80 per share.
The next offering in January 2026 made $109.2 million at $90 per share. Money was he retired A $20 million loan from Coinbase Credit Inc., taken out as part of Semler’s purchase, is in exchange for $90 million of Semler’s convertible preferred shares. debt.
Strive’s acquisition of Semler Scientific also included the active business under the Clinivanta company, which focuses on health care products.
The company appointed Michelle Fox, the former Chief Medical Officer of Teleflex, to be the CEO of Clinivanta in February 2026, indicating the intention to grow the business along with its main goal in the accumulation of bitcoin.
Chairman and CEO Matthew Cole framed the results as validation of Strive’s financial strategy. “The most important achievement in the first six months as a public company was strengthening our foundation as a sustainable financial company focused on digital credit,”
Cole said. He emphasized that the tool SATA offers a fluid, scalable way to invest in the pursuit of two-digit yields with low volatility, aligning with Strive’s method of combining bitcoin accumulation with a wide range of financial services.
As of March 17, 2026, Strive had $83.7 million in cash and $50.4 million in fair value of STRC’s preferred stock.





