Dollar Cost Averaging — a concept as old as portfolio management. Buy a fixed amount at equal intervals regardless of price. It works because it eliminates the hardest-to-detect mistake: excessive confidence about whether "it is already cheap." But at the corporate level, DCA is not just a strategy — it is an operating process with rules, counterparties and hard enforcement.
Why not market timing
The argument for market timing sounds plausible: since we have an analytics team, an on-chain model, exchange-flow data, why not try to buy during drawdowns? The answer is mathematical and uncomfortable: in Bitcoin's 15-year history, attempts at monthly market-timing statistically lowered returns versus DCA — even with teams that were right more than 50% of the time.
The reason: the psychological cost of delaying decisions "because it will go lower" in bull markets outweighs the gains from correctly avoiding corrections in bear markets. This is structural asymmetry, not a skill question.
The architecture of our DCA
The process has four layers. Each has an owner in the organization and its own audit trail.
1. Buy rule
Weekly purchase of a fixed PLN amount, approved in 13-week cycles by the investment committee. No manual intervention on individual trades. No "pauses" during sharp drawdowns — quite the opposite, a lower price means more BTC for the same amount, which is a feature of DCA, not a bug.
2. Execution
Trades executed via two independent OTC desks (domestic and foreign), with a built-in spread limit. Every transaction has its own ID, execution time, volume-weighted price and on-chain confirmation.
3. Custody
BTC moves immediately after settlement into a multi-signature 3-of-5 structure, with keys geographically distributed (Poland, Switzerland, Singapore) and held by three independent parties plus two internal. No single party can move funds.
4. Reporting
Every quarter we publish proof-of-reserves — cryptographic proof that the BTC reported on the balance sheet actually exists at addresses controlled by the company. Don't trust, verify — also as a shareholder.
What happens when the market is volatile
The hardest part is not 30–40% drawdowns. Those are everyday for Bitcoin. The hardest part is the discipline of continuing purchases after another ATH, when "intuition" says you are overpaying. The statistics say otherwise — and that is exactly why the process exists.
"Corporate treasury in Bitcoin is not about being smart. It is about being unshakable."
Issuance leverage — the second engine
DCA from current cash flows is the base. The second engine is issuance of shares and corporate bonds during periods when the listed company trades above its BTC NAV per share (NAV premium). Issuing at a premium lets us buy more BTC per share than before the issuance — a mechanism that builds in accretion for existing shareholders. But it requires hard rules: never issue below NAV, never grow debt above 1.5–2× of BTC capitalization.
What comes next
Next post: custody without compromise — how our 3-of-5 model looks in practice, who holds the keys, how we audit, what happens when a signer steps down.
Get in touch
with the team.
Qualified investors, family offices, foundations, journalists and strategic partners — write directly to the IR team.
Headquarters
Warsaw, Poland
Response time
Up to 2 business days