Metaplanet, the Tokyo-listed company best known for its aggressive Bitcoin accumulation strategy, is expanding well beyond treasury management. CEO Simon Gerovich announced Wednesday that the company's board had approved the creation of two wholly owned subsidiaries: Metaplanet Ventures and Metaplanet Asset Management.
Today our Board approved the establishment of two new wholly owned subsidiaries, Metaplanet Ventures and Metaplanet Asset Management.
— Simon Gerovich (@gerovich) March 12, 2026
Metaplanet Ventures is our commitment to Japan's Bitcoin ecosystem. We'll be investing ¥4 billion over the next few years into companies building…
According to Gerovich, Metaplanet Ventures will deploy ¥4 billion (~$26 million) over the coming years into Japanese companies building Bitcoin financial infrastructure, spanning lending, payments, custody, stablecoins, derivatives, and compliance tooling.
The unit will also run an incubator for early-stage Japanese founders and a grants program for open-source Bitcoin developers, educators, and researchers. Its first investment is a stake of up to ¥400 million ($2.6 million) in JPYC, Japan's first licensed yen stablecoin, which Metaplanet frames as critical rail for institutional crypto transactions.
"Every Bitcoin transaction has two sides," Gerovich wrote on X . "Bitcoin and a currency. As this market goes institutional, that currency side goes digital."
Metaplanet Asset Management, headquartered in Miami, will serve as the company's digital credit and Bitcoin capital markets platform, designed to connect Asian and Western investors across yield, equity, credit, and volatility strategies.
The move signals a strategic evolution: from passive accumulator to active ecosystem builder. Metaplanet currently holds 35,102 BTC, worth roughly $2.5 billion at current prices, making it the fourth-largest publicly traded Bitcoin holder in the world, behind Strategy Inc., MARA Holdings, and Twenty One Capital. Its "555 Million Plan" targets 100,000 BTC by the end of 2026 and 210,000 BTC by 2027.
The stock, however, has had a bruising run. Shares closed recently around ¥340-360, down roughly 82% from a June 2025 peak of ¥1,930. The stock currently trades around ¥358, with a year-over-year decline of approximately 1.1%, though it has risen 4% in the past week. The company's average Bitcoin acquisition cost sits at approximately $107,000 per token — well above current market prices — leaving its treasury holdings deeply underwater. Metaplanet carries roughly $280 million in outstanding debt and in January announced plans to raise up to ¥21 billion through new share issuances and warrants to fund further BTC purchases and reduce liabilities.
Despite the drawdown, Gerovich is betting on Japan's regulatory environment as a durable competitive advantage. Japan has been among the most proactive major economies in licensing crypto businesses, and recent approvals have further cleared the path for institutional infrastructure development. The Ventures subsidiary is framed explicitly as an effort to populate that regulatory landscape with capable builders.
"Japan has built the best regulatory framework in the world for digital assets," Gerovich said. "Now it needs the companies, the builders, and the infrastructure to match."
Globally, roughly 130 public companies now collectively hold around $87 billion in Bitcoin, a cohort Metaplanet is now positioning itself to serve, not just join.


