Spanish café operator Vanadi Coffee has approved a plan to allocate up to €1 billion of its treasury into Bitcoin, marking a striking pivot from its core hospitality business into crypto‑asset accumulation. The decision, ratified by shareholders on 29 June, seeks to position the firm—currently loss‑making and operating just six outlets—as one of Spain’s largest Bitcoin holders.
Vanadi already owns 54 BTC, acquired at an average price of around €93,444 per coin, valued today at approximately €5.8 million. Its share price surged over 25 per cent following the announcement, a staggering boost for a business that reported €3.3 million in losses during 2024. Market observers note the stock has rallied more than 400 per cent year‑to‑date on hopes that crypto‑oriented balance sheets can act as alternative stores of value.
The strategic shift draws inspiration from established Bitcoin treasury pioneers such as MicroStrategy, which holds nearly 500,000 BTC and has leveraged convertible equity vehicles to fund its crypto purchases. Likewise, Japanese firm Metaplanet is acquiring Bitcoin aggressively as part of its acquisition-backed model. Vanadi’s leadership believes this approach can appeal to institutional investors seeking inflation hedges without disrupting conventional asset portfolios.
Analysts warn the company faces elevated risk. Vanadi operates at a negative equity of around €600,000, and auditors have flagged uncertainty over its going‑concern status. Critics argue a small café chain with slender margins and negligible exposure to financial markets may lack the sophistication to withstand Bitcoin’s volatility and regulatory scrutiny.
Financing the Bitcoin ramp‑up will involve issuing convertible bonds and equity, leveraging commitments from niche funders including Patblasc Software Consulting and Alpha Blue Ocean’s Global Tech Opportunities 10. Some question both the provenance and capacity of these investors, given their prior backing of distressed asset plays such as Intercity and Substrate AI.
Vanadi acknowledges the gamble may redefine its identity: “We aim to become the largest listed Bitcoin‑holding company in Spain,” it said, equating its structural transformation to precedent‑setting players in the sector. Nonetheless, it has had to scale back expansion ambitions, cutting its growth pipeline amid constrained resources and shifting priorities.
Vanadi’s strategy forms part of a broader wave of crypto treasury activity. A growing number of under‑the‑radar firms in Europe—from chipmakers to fintech startups—are joining major players in the US and Asia investing heavily in Bitcoin. Collectively, these firms moved over 10,000 BTC onto their books in late June, totalling several billion dollars in accumulated digital assets.
Experts suggest this trend follows Gartner’s classic hype‑cycle pattern: as Bitcoin becomes easier to acquire and gain public approval, doubt gives way to widespread optimism—driving speculative surges across new sectors. Vanadi’s move, while surprising due to its modest scale, fits squarely within this wave of enthusiasm.
London‑listed Strategy recently launched a $21 billion preferred stock offering to fund more Bitcoin purchases, underscoring how corporate balance sheets are being reconfigured around digital assets. Vanadi hopes to replicate this formula, albeit with far fewer resources and heightened risk exposure.
Vanadi’s management calls the transition a “long‑term bet on a decentralised financial model,” arguing that crypto reserves provide institutional credibility and operational transparency under existing market regulations. Yet, whether this approach offers sustainable upside or represents a peak‑hype miscalculation remains under intense debate among analysts and investors.