Elon Musk is an icon within crypto. That’s due in large part to his association with the dogecoin meme token — for a few months last year Musk was known as the “Dogefather” — but it’s also because Tesla is one of the most prominent institutional investors in bitcoin. Or at least, it was.
In Tesla’s latest earnings report, released Wednesday, the company revealed it has sold the majority of its bitcoin: “We have converted approximately 75% of our Bitcoin purchases into fiat currency. Conversions in Q2 added $936M of cash to our balance sheet.”
In a subsequent earnings call, Musk explained the sell-off was related to ongoing COVID lockdowns in China, the world’s biggest car market and also where many Tesla vehicles are manufactured.
“The reason we sold a bunch of our bitcoin holdings is we were uncertain as to when the covid lockdowns in China would alleviate, so it was important for us to maximize our cash position given the uncertainty,” Musk said. “We are certainly open to increasing our bitcoin holdings in future, so this should not be taken as some verdict of bitcoin.”
“We have not sold any of our dogecoin, we still have our dogecoin,” Musk added.
Tesla has $621 million in cash, according to Wednesday’s earnings report, which means it would have been cash flow negative were it not for the $936 million bitcoin sale.
Tesla’s $1.5 billion purchase of bitcoin, revealed in an SEC filing in February 2021, contributed to the market’s euphoria for cryptocurrency that caused bitcoin’s price to explode from around $20,000 in December 2020 to $60,000 in March 2021. Tesla’s reserves of bitcoin at one point hit a high of $2 billion in value. Tesla originally bought bitcoin to “provide us with more flexibility to further diversify and maximize returns on our cash,” the company said in its 2021 SEC filing.
Spurred in large part by tweets of encouragement from Musk, dogecoin hit 70 cents last May and briefly reached a marketcap of $70 billion. It’s not known how much dogecoin Tesla owns, though the company’s earning report states it holds $218 million in digital assets. Much of that is likely to be Tesla’s remaining bitcoin.
Crypto prices have since fallen precipitously from their 2021 highs. Bitcoin is down 48% since the year began, while ether, the second biggest crypto, has fallen 57% since Jan. 1. Dogecoin is currently sitting at just above 7…
Read More: Tesla Sold $936M of Bitcoin, Kept its Dogecoin Reserves