Bitcoin company Twenty One Capital stumbled out of the gate this week, with shares plunging 20% immediately following its SPAC merger with Cantor Equity Partners. The dramatic selloff came despite the company launching with an impressive 42,000 Bitcoin treasury, positioning it as the third-largest Bitcoin holder globally as of April 2025. So much for a warm market welcome.
The merger with Cantor Equity Partners, a SPAC sponsored by financial giant Cantor Fitzgerald, was designed to create a Bitcoin-native investment vehicle targeting institutional investors. Apparently, those same investors weren’t exactly thrilled with what they saw. The deal closed with significant financial backing from heavy hitters including Tether, SoftBank Group, and Strike founder Jack Mallers.
Twenty One’s business model is straightforward – use capital raised through the SPAC and accompanying PIPE offerings to accumulate Bitcoin. The company’s innovative Bitcoin Per Share metric aims to reflect shareholder ownership in the cryptocurrency rather than traditional financial measurements. Give investors exposure to Bitcoin without the headaches of direct ownership or custody. Simple enough, right? Investors didn’t seem convinced.
Despite all the financial engineering, Twenty One’s buy-Bitcoin-and-hold strategy left Wall Street surprisingly cold.
The PIPE offering proceeds were specifically earmarked for additional Bitcoin purchases beyond the initial 42,000 coins. Tether committed to matching Bitcoin purchases roughly equal to the convertible notes and PIPE equity offerings, minus expenses. The company aimed to capitalize on Bitcoin’s market dominance of approximately 62.7% and its reputation as a safe haven asset. All very cozy.
Market reactions suggest investors are skeptical about the valuation, merger terms, or Bitcoin’s current market volatility. After completing the merger on December 9, 2025, the stock trades on Nasdaq under Cantor’s CEP ticker, making Twenty One’s performance closely watched by traditional finance players now exposed to crypto markets.
This price movement fits the classic post-SPAC merger volatility playbook, especially for crypto-related entities. No timeline for recovery has emerged yet.
The irony is thick – a company designed to give institutions easier Bitcoin exposure can’t seem to convince the market of its own value. The question remains whether Twenty One can recover from its rocky debut or if investors will continue their 20% off Bitcoin sale.