GameStop’s latest SEC filing points to a specific change in its crypto treasury strategy, not a retreat from Bitcoin. The company pledged 4,709 of its 4,710 BTC to Coinbase Credit as collateral for covered call options, preserving economic exposure while collecting premium income and accepting a cap on gains above roughly $105,000 to $110,000 per Bitcoin.
Why the Coinbase transfer does not equal a Bitcoin exit
The easy read on the transfer was wrong. GameStop did not simply dump its Bitcoin after moving nearly all of it to Coinbase Prime in early 2026. In its annual filing, the company said those coins were pledged as collateral in a covered call strategy with Coinbase Credit. That matters because the economics are different from a sale: GameStop still participates in Bitcoin price moves up to the strike range and earns option premium, but gives up upside beyond the agreed exercise prices if the contracts are called away.
The strike prices were set between $105,000 and $110,000, well above Bitcoin’s trading range near $68,000 at the time referenced in the filing. That out-of-the-money setup suggests the initial goal was income generation rather than an immediate disposal of the treasury position. If Bitcoin stays below the strikes into expiration in late March 2026, the calls can expire worthless and GameStop keeps both the premium and the underlying exposure.
How the structure changed the balance sheet
The more consequential signal for market watchers is the accounting treatment. Because Coinbase obtained control rights over the collateral, including the ability to rehypothecate, sell, or commingle the pledged Bitcoin, GameStop derecognized the 4,709 BTC from intangible assets. In their place, it recorded a digital asset receivable worth about $368.3 million as of January 31, 2026. That accounting shift made GameStop appear to drop from 21st to around 190th among public company Bitcoin holders, even though the company’s economic exposure was not simply gone.
This is exactly where headline rankings can mislead. A holder list built from directly reported balance-sheet Bitcoin will show a sharp decline, but that does not capture the difference between legal control, collateral treatment, and retained market exposure. For crypto market structure readers, the relevant distinction is that GameStop moved from straightforward spot custody into a collateralized derivatives arrangement tied to a single counterparty.
Income now, capped upside later
Covered calls are a trade-off, not a free yield overlay. GameStop collected premium income and reported a $2.3 million unrealized gain tied to the strategy, alongside a $700,000 liability at fiscal year-end. But if Bitcoin rallies through the $105,000 to $110,000 strike band before expiration, the company would have to deliver Bitcoin at those prices, losing the benefit of further upside above that level.
The context inside GameStop’s operating business helps explain why that trade-off may have appealed. The company reported a 25% revenue decline and a 14% drop in fourth-quarter sales for 2025 as physical game retail continued to weaken. In that setting, monetizing a dormant treasury asset through options premium is different from the pure hold-and-wait model used by many public Bitcoin treasury companies.
| Feature | Pure Bitcoin hold | GameStop’s covered call structure |
|---|---|---|
| Exposure to BTC price | Full upside and downside | Retained up to strike, capped above $105,000 to $110,000 |
| Income generation | None unless sold or lent | Option premium collected |
| Balance-sheet presentation | Bitcoin held directly as reported asset | Derecognized BTC replaced by digital asset receivable |
| Key added risk | Market volatility | Market volatility plus counterparty and collateral-control risk |
What the filing says about risk, not just strategy
The filing also showed the cost of that complexity. GameStop recorded a $59.7 million unrealized loss on the digital asset receivable, and its total digital asset loss for the year reached $131.6 million, including a $71.8 million realized loss tied to derecognizing the pledged Bitcoin. Those figures do not mean the options trade failed on its own terms, but they do show how quickly balance-sheet optics and reported earnings can diverge from the simpler narrative of “the company still owns Bitcoin.”
There is also a practical counterparty dimension. Once the coins were pledged under terms that gave Coinbase significant control rights, GameStop’s exposure stopped being only a Bitcoin price story. It became partly a Coinbase credit and collateral-management story as well. For investors comparing treasury models across listed companies, that is a meaningful distinction from firms that hold spot Bitcoin outright with no derivatives overlay.
Late-March 2026 is the real checkpoint
The next useful signal is not another social-media interpretation of wallet movement. It is the expiration outcome of the covered call contracts in late March 2026 and any follow-up disclosure on whether GameStop renews, expands, or exits the strategy. Some contracts reportedly expired unexercised, which would be the ideal short-term result for an issuer seeking premium income without losing the underlying asset.
If GameStop repeats the structure, that would indicate the company is building an income-oriented Bitcoin treasury program rather than using a one-off hedge. If it unwinds the approach after the first cycle, the episode may look more like opportunistic cash-flow management during operating strain than a durable shift in corporate crypto policy.
Short reader check
Did GameStop sell its Bitcoin?
Not in the simple sense. It pledged 4,709 BTC as collateral and kept economic exposure through a covered call structure.
Why did its Bitcoin holder ranking fall so sharply?
Because the pledged coins were derecognized for accounting purposes and replaced by a receivable, which changes how public trackers count the position.
What would invalidate the “income overlay” interpretation?
A move to keep rolling calls at lower strikes, materially reduce retained exposure, or disclose a broader shift away from Bitcoin treasury holdings after the March 2026 expirations.

