Good morning. There’s a rising pattern amongst company treasuries so as to add bitcoin to their steadiness sheets as institutional acceptance and regulatory readability improve.
Since 2020, fintech Block (No. 179 on the Fortune 500) has held bitcoin as a part of its company belongings. Past its service provider providers and lending instruments by way of Sq., and investing options for Money App customers, the corporate not too long ago introduced Sq. Bitcoin—a completely built-in bitcoin funds and pockets resolution launching Nov. 10 for companies of all sizes.
“We may help flip our Sq. sellers into company bitcoin holding corporations as nicely,” Amrita Ahuja, Block’s COO and CFO, informed me.
I spoke with Ahuja, together with Neil Jorgensen, Block’s treasury company lead, and Nikhil Dixit, head of economic planning and evaluation, about how the corporate approaches bitcoin.
From experiment to technique
Block’s bitcoin journey started with buyer demand. In 2018, Money App launched the flexibility for customers to purchase, maintain, and promote bitcoin. Since then, greater than 20 million Money App actives have traded over $58 billion price of bitcoin, Ahuja mentioned.
In 2020, Block made its first company bitcoin buy—$50 million, lower than 1% of whole belongings—primarily as a studying train, she mentioned. The next 12 months, Block expanded its holdings with an extra $170 million funding in bitcoin, and in 2024 adopted a dollar-cost averaging technique, reinvesting 10% of month-to-month gross revenue from bitcoin merchandise, Ahuja defined.
Block has additionally open-sourced its bitcoin frameworks and white papers and launched a real-time bitcoin dashboard displaying its holdings and worth knowledge. As of the second quarter of this 12 months, Block held 8,692 bitcoin on its steadiness sheet.
Taking the lengthy view
Many finance leaders stay cautious, viewing bitcoin as too unstable—particularly not too long ago—in comparison with conventional belongings. Jorgensen acknowledges that notion.
Some see it as unstable and fear about shareholder response, he mentioned. “However we don’t leverage bitcoin as our working capital—we don’t journey an emotional curler coaster with it,” he added.
Block positions bitcoin as a long-term funding, guided by clear danger parameters, in keeping with the leaders.
“Begin small,” Ahuja suggested. “Whether or not it’s a $1 cost-averaging program or a small one-time buy, construct understanding first.”
“Having a long-term view may be very useful,” Jorgensen mentioned. “We’ve all the time held a really long-term view, so it provides us confidence. We sleep nicely at evening.”
Ahuja famous that institutional infrastructure for bitcoin—custodians, liquidity suppliers, and banks—has matured considerably over the previous a number of years, creating higher stability.
Again in 2020, when bitcoin traded round $10,000, traders noticed it as purely speculative, Dixit mentioned, who beforehand led investor relations at Block. The problem on the time was explaining that Block’s bitcoin technique was a principled, calculated danger representing a small slice of its portfolio, he defined. “At the moment, that sentiment has shifted dramatically,” he mentioned.
Wanting forward
Block’s leaders emphasize the significance of monitoring regulation and treating bitcoin like every other strategic asset.
“AI is altering nearly each vector we will see,” Jorgensen mentioned. “We need to be on the forefront—and we see bitcoin as a part of that future.”
Ahuja’s recommendation to friends: Deal with bitcoin as a strategic funding and be prepared to elucidate your rationale within the context of what you are promoting, liquidity, and danger urge for food.
Sheryl Estrada
[email protected]
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Leaderboard
Fortune 500 Energy Strikes
Benjamin E. Meisenzahl was promoted to CFO of The Sherwin-Williams Firm (No. 191), efficient Jan. 1, 2026. Meisenzahl has served as SVP of finance for the final two and a half years. He’ll assume the CFO duties at the moment held by Allen J. Mistysyn, who will tackle a short-term transition position earlier than retiring after 35 years with the corporate. Meisenzahl has held a number of roles of accelerating duty over his 22-year profession with Sherwin-Williams, together with his present place, in addition to international finance and operational roles within the firm’s Paint Shops Group, Efficiency Coatings Group, and International Provide Chain. He started his profession at Sherwin-Williams as an inner auditor.
Each Friday morning, the weekly Fortune 500 Energy Strikes column tracks Fortune 500 firm C-suite shifts—see the newest version.
Extra notable strikes
Joe Kauffman was appointed president and CFO of Deel, a worldwide payroll and HR platform. Kauffman joins Deel following greater than a decade of management at Credit score Karma, the place he served as CFO, president, and CEO. Earlier than that, he held CFO and company improvement roles at two NYSE-listed corporations. Philippe Bouaziz, who has served as Deel’s CFO for the reason that firm’s founding, will transfer into the newly established position of government chairman and chief technique officer.
Massive Deal
E*TRADE from Morgan Stanley’s month-to-month evaluation discovered that the corporations shoppers have been internet patrons in 10 of 11 S&P 500 sectors. The three most-bought sectors in October 2025 have been communication providers (+11.80%), utilities (+11.78%), and financials (+10.87%). For the second month in a row, exercise in utilities gave the impression to be pushed extra by risk-on shopping for in nuclear and alt-energy shares than by historically defensive utility corporations, in keeping with Chris Larkin, managing director of buying and selling and investing.
“Tech led the market once more in October, and shoppers continued to focus on a few of the megacap tech names that dominate the communication providers sector,” Larkin mentioned in a press release. “On the opposite facet of the fence, the shift away from well being care might have had a component of profit-taking, with shoppers showing to promote some shares that had rallied strongly in earlier months.”
Going deeper
“Walmart CEO mentioned paying its star managers upwards of $620,000 yearly empowered them to ‘really feel like homeowners,'” is a Fortune report by Emma Burleigh.
From the report: “For a lot of staff, it may be exhausting to really feel linked to their firm, particularly at enormous firms like Walmart. However in 2024, Walmart U.S. CEO John Furner pulled out the massive weapons to make sure star managers really feel the love—by paying them upwards of $620,000 per 12 months.”
“And that wager has been working up to now. In 2024, Walmart claimed the highest spot on the Fortune 500—and landed on the Fortune Finest Corporations to Work For listing not simply final 12 months, however once more in 2025. Walmart mentioned it has additionally improved its hourly employee retention fee by 10% over the previous decade.” You possibly can learn extra right here.
Overheard
“These aren’t extraordinary outcomes. These are arguably the most effective outcomes that any software program firm has ever delivered.”
—Palantir CEO Alex Karp mentioned on Monday in the course of the firm’s quarterly earnings name. The protection tech and AI software program firm posted third-quarter income of roughly $1.2 billion, up 63% from the year-ago interval and above the common analyst expectation, Fortune reported. Palantir’s authorities contracts enterprise stays robust; nonetheless, enterprise from U.S. industrial prospects drove the corporate’s progress within the third quarter, increasing by 121% year-over-year to $397 million.













