Key Takeaways Tesla has revealed that it sold 75% of its Bitcoin holdings during the last quarter. The electric vehicle company stated it had raised $936 million in cash from slashing its holdings, but its profitability had been affected. Tesla originally bought $1.5 billion worth of Bitcoin in early 2021 at an average price of…
Tesla has revealed that it sold 75% of its Bitcoin holdings during the last quarter.
The electric vehicle company stated it had raised $936 million in cash from slashing its holdings, but its profitability had been affected.
Tesla originally bought $1.5 billion worth of Bitcoin in early 2021 at an average price of around $31,000.
Share this article
URL Copied
Tesla now holds only $218 million worth of Bitcoin, down from more than $1.2 billion.
Only $218 Million in Bitcoin Left
Tesla has sold most of its Bitcoin.
In its latest quarterly report published late Wednesday, the electric car giant revealed that it had converted “approximately 75%” of its Bitcoin holdings into fiat currency. As of June 30, the firm held only $218 million in digital assets, down from more than $1.2 billion in March.
The report stated that the Bitcoin sale had “added $936 million of cash” to the company’s balance sheet. While Tesla did not clarify whether it had sold Bitcoin at lower prices than it had originally bought, it noted Bitcoin had been an “impairment” that had negatively affected profitability.
Tesla CEO Elon Musk explained today in an earnings call that the company had sold “a bunch” of its Bitcoin due to liquidity concerns prompted by China’s COVID lockdowns. He stated that Tesla is “certainly open to increasing [its] Bitcoin holdings in the future,” and added that the firm had not reduced its Dogecoin holdings.
Musk originally announced his support for Bitcoin on January 29, 2021 by including the name of the top cryptocurrency on his Twitter profile; a few days later Tesla revealed it had bought $1.5 billion worth of Bitcoin and had started accepting Bitcoin payments.
Tesla bought into Bitcoin at an average price of roughly $31,700; while the exact date the company sold its holdings is unknown, as is the number of coins it sold, Bitcoin suffered a sharp drop in Q2. It declined from around $47,000 to $19,000 from March 31 to June 30, suggesting that the company may have sold at a loss.
Disclosure: At the time of writing, the author of this piece owned ETH and several other cryptocurrencies.
Share this article
URL Copied
The information on or accessed through this website is obtained from independent sources we believe to be accurate and reliable, but Decentral Media, Inc. makes no representation or warranty as to the timeliness, completeness, or accuracy of any information on or accessed through this website. Decentral Media, Inc. is not an investment advisor. We do not give personalized investment advice or other financial advice. The information on this website is subject to change without notice. Some or all of the information on this website may become outdated, or it may be or become incomplete or inaccurate. We may, but are not obligated to, update any outdated, incomplete, or inaccurate information.
You should never make an investment decision on an ICO, IEO, or other investment based on the information on this website, and you should never interpret or otherwise rely on any of the information on this website as investment advice. We strongly recommend that you consult a licensed investment advisor or other qualified financial professional if you are seeking investment advice on an ICO, IEO, or other investment. We do not accept compensation in any form for analyzing or reporting on any ICO, IEO, cryptocurrency, currency, tokenized sales, securities, or commodities.
See full terms and conditions.
Recommended News
Bitcoin on Track for $50,000 as Tesla Buys Into Crypto Craze
Markets
Bitcoin made a new record high of $44,900 after Tesla disclosed a massive investment in this cryptocurrency. Though BTC has stabilized after a significant move, it entered a no-trade zone…
Elon Musk Will Give “Full Support” to Dogecoin if Big Holders Sell
Business
Elon Musk is back to talking about Dogecoin. Now, he says that the token supply needs to be more distributed. Musk Keen to Decentralize Dogecoin Elon Musk has posted more…
How Companies like Apple Can Follow Tesla’s Bitcoin Investment
Analysis
Tesla’s Bitcoin investment disclosure caused the largest single-day surge in Bitcoin since December 2017 of 19.45%, BTC reached a peak of $48,200 this morning. After Tesla, opinions rage about which…
Tech Share Share this article Copy link X icon X (Twitter) LinkedIn Facebook Email A simple explainer on what quantum computing actually is, and why it is terrifying for bitcoin Most simplifies the complex process of quantum computing as “it can be 0 and 1 at the same time.” That is not an explanation for
Published
21 hours ago
in
By
Tech
Share this article
X (Twitter)LinkedInFacebookEmail
A simple explainer on what quantum computing actually is, and why it is terrifying for bitcoin
Most simplifies the complex process of quantum computing as “it can be 0 and 1 at the same time.” That is not an explanation for why it threatens Bitcoin. This is.
Google has published research suggesting a future quantum computer could theoretically derive a bitcoin private key from its public key in about nine minutes, threatening the security of Bitcoin and other cryptographic systems.
Unlike classical computers, which process bits as either 0 or 1, quantum computers use qubits that can exist in multiple states simultaneously and exploit phenomena like superposition and entanglement to explore many possibilities at once.
This fundamentally different form of computation could undermine the mathematical assumptions behind current encryption, raising urgent concerns about the safety of existing blockchain assets and digital security more broadly.
This week, Google published a paper describing how a quantum computer could theoretically derive a bitcoin private key in 9 minutes, with ramifications that stretch to Ethereum, other tokens, private banking, and potentially everything in the world.
Quantum computing is easy to mistake for a faster version of a regular computer. But it is not a more powerful chip or a bigger server farm. It is a fundamentally different kind of machine, different at the level of the atom itself.
A quantum computer starts with a very cold, very small loop of metal where particles begin to behave in ways they do not behave under normal conditions on Earth, ways that alter what we think of as the basic rules of physics.
Understanding what that means, physically, is the difference between reading about the quantum threat and actually grasping it.
How computers and quantum computers actually work
Regular computers store information as bits — each is either a 0 or a 1. A bit is a tiny switch. Physically, it’s a transistor on a “chip” — a microscopic gate that either lets electricity through (1) or doesn’t (0).
Every photo, every bitcoin transaction, every word you’ve ever typed is stored as patterns of these switches being on or off. There is nothing mysterious about a bit; it is a physical object in one of the two definite states.
Every calculation is just shuffling these 0s and 1s around really fast. A modern chip can do billions of these per second, but it still does them one at a time, in sequence.
Quantum computers use something known as qubits instead of bits. A qubit can be 0, 1, or — and this is the weird part — both at the same time!
This is possible as a qubit is a completely different kind of physical object. The most common version, and the one Google uses, is a tiny loop of superconducting metal cooled to about 0.015 degrees above absolute zero, colder than outer space but here on Earth.
At that temperature, electricity flows through the loop without any resistance, and the current is said to exist in a quantum state.
In the superconducting loop, current can flow clockwise (call that 0) or counterclockwise (call that 1). But at quantum scales, the current does not have to pick one direction and actually flows in both directions simultaneously.
Don’t mistake it for switching between the two really fast. The current is measurably, experimentally and verifiably in both states simultaneously.
Mind-bending physics
With us so far? Great, because here’s where it gets genuinely strange, because the physics behind how it works isn’t immediately intuitive, and it is not supposed to be.
Everything someone interacts with in daily life obeys classical physics, which assumes that things are in one place at one time. But particles do not behave this way at the subatomic scale.
An electron does not have a definite position until you look at it. A photon does not have a definite polarization until you measure it. A current in a superconducting loop does not flow in a definite direction until you force it to pick.
The reason we don’t experience this in everyday life is decoherence. When a quantum system interacts with its environment, air molecules, heat, vibrations and light, the superposition collapses almost instantly.
A football cannot be in two places at once because it is interacting with trillions of air molecules, dust, sound, heat, gravity, etc., every nanosecond. But isolate a tiny current in a near-absolute-zero vacuum, shield it from every possible disturbance, and the quantum behavior survives long enough to compute with.
That’s why quantum computers are so hard to build. People are engineering physical environments where the laws of physics that normally prevent this stuff from happening are held at bay for just long enough to run a calculation.
Google’s machines operate in dilution refrigerators the size of huge rooms, colder than anything in the natural universe, surrounded by layers of shielding against electromagnetic noise, vibration, and thermal radiation.
And the qubits are fragile even then. They lose their quantum state constantly, which is why “error correction” dominates every conversation about scaling up.
So quantum computing is not a faster version of classical computing. It is exploiting a different set of physical laws that only apply at extremely small scales, extremely low temperatures, and extremely short timeframes.
Now stack that up.
Two regular bits can be in one of four states (00, 01, 10, 11), but only one at a time (since current flows in only one direction). Two qubits can represent all four states at once, as the current is flowing in all directions at the same time.
Three qubits represent eight states. Ten qubits represent 1,024. Fifty qubits represent over a quadrillion. The number doubles with every qubit that is added, which is why the scaling is so exponential.
The second trick is something called entanglement. When two qubits are entangled, measuring one instantly tells an observer something about the other, no matter how far apart they are. This lets a quantum computer coordinate across all those simultaneous states in a way that regular parallel computing cannot.
And these quantum computers are set up so that wrong answers cancel each other out (like overlapping waves that flatten) and right answers reinforce each other (like waves that stack higher). By the end of the computation, the correct answer has the highest probability of being measured.
So it’s not brute-force speed. It’s a fundamentally different approach to calculation — one that lets nature explore an exponentially large space of possibilities and then collapses to the right answer through physics rather than logic.
A monumental threat to cryptography
This mind-bending physics is why it is terrifying for encryption.
The math protecting bitcoin relies on the assumption that checking every possible key would take longer than the age of the universe.
But a quantum computer doesn’t check every key. It explores all of them simultaneously and uses interference to surface the right one.
That is where it ties into Bitcoin. Going one direction, from private key to public key, takes milliseconds. Going the other direction, from public key back to private key, would take a classical computer a million years, or even longer than the age of the universe. That asymmetry is the only thing proving that a person is holding their coins.
A quantum computer running an algorithm called Shor’s can go through that trapdoor in reverse. Google’s paper this week showed it could do so with far fewer resources than anyone previously estimated, and within a timeframe that races against bitcoin’s own block confirmations.
This is why the threat of quantum computers breaking blockchain encryption is genuinely making everyone very worried.
How that attack works step by step, what Google’s paper specifically changed, and what it means for the 6.9 million bitcoin already exposed, is the subject of the next piece in this series.
Bitcoin News
More For You
Industry leaders are pouring hundreds of millions into a rescue plan for Aave users after massive crypto hack
By Margaux Nijkerk|Edited by Aoyon Ashraf
4 hours ago
The response to the DeFi recovery fund has quickly extended beyond Aave, and in some cases began with direct outreach.
What to know:
Aave is spearheading a coordinated DeFi recovery effort after the Kelp DAO exploit, with more than $300 million in pledged support from major players like Consensys, Lido, EtherFi, and others, though much remains subject to governance approval.
Contributions span donations, deposits, and credit lines, while Aave is also seeking to…
Read full story
Latest Crypto News
Industry leaders are pouring hundreds of millions into a rescue plan for Aave users after massive crypto hack
4 hours ago
Bitcoin rally shows signs of fatigue as key indicators turn bearish
4 hours ago
Western Union eyeing stablecoin launch to settle global transactions without SWIFT, CEO says
5 hours ago
MARA Holdings targets bitcoin quantum threat and network resilience with new foundation
7 hours ago
Bitcoin pulls back to $76,600 as rising oil price and Iran risks stall the rally
8 hours ago
Curve founder pitches market-based fix for $700K bad debt in contrast to Aave bailout
9 hours ago
Top Stories
Bitmine buys $236 million in ether as Tom Lee touts ETH as ‘wartime store of value’
12 hours ago
A long-time developer wants to split Bitcoin blockchain and reassign Satoshi coins. The community is calling it a theft
18 hours ago
Michael Saylor’s Strategy buys 3,273 bitcoin as it inches closer to its 1 million target
11 hours ago
Bitcoin is climbing on thin volume, leaving rally vulnerable to macro shock
9 hours ago
Bitcoin funds take in $933 million as crypto ETFs hit highest AUM since February
13 hours ago
Pudgy Penguins, BAYC rally masks a shrinking NFT market as volumes and users fall
Bitcoin is currently exhibiting mixed signals since it’s finding itself at important levels of support and resistance. The momentum still favors neither buyers nor sellers as the crypto tries to establish where it will head, either upwards or downwards, towards the lower support. At the time of writing…
Published
21 hours ago
in
By
Bitcoin is currently exhibiting mixed signals since it’s finding itself at important levels of support and resistance. The momentum still favors neither buyers nor sellers as the crypto tries to establish where it will head, either upwards or downwards, towards the lower support. At the time of writing… Read More
Something is shifting in the Bitcoin chart, and the traders watching closest are already moving. A new Mercado Bitcoin study found that BTC beats gold and the S&P 500 in the 60 days after every major global shock, and with the Iran crisis still fresh, the setup points to a massive bounce…
Published
21 hours ago
in
By
Something is shifting in the Bitcoin chart, and the traders watching closest are already moving. A new Mercado Bitcoin study found that BTC beats gold and the S&P 500 in the 60 days after every major global shock, and with the Iran crisis still fresh, the setup points to a massive bounce… Read More
James Wynn, the high-leverage crypto trader known for turning $7,600 into $25 million on PEPE, warned traders that markets will deteriorate further before recovering. Wynn outlined a multi-asset defensive strategy, shorting US equities and going long on oil while selectively buying Bitcoin (BTC) dips with spot capital…
Published
21 hours ago
in
By
James Wynn, the high-leverage crypto trader known for turning $7,600 into $25 million on PEPE, warned traders that markets will deteriorate further before recovering. Wynn outlined a multi-asset defensive strategy, shorting US equities and going long on oil while selectively buying Bitcoin (BTC) dips with spot capital… Read More