Philadelphia, June 4, 2026, 16:04 (EDT)
BTC Development Corp. (Nasdaq) slipped 0.1% to $10.05 Thursday, showing little reaction as bitcoin tumbled and its crypto-related SPAC plans surfaced again. Volume was thin at 2,113 shares, with the stock stuck between $10.05 and $10.06.
That’s important right now since BTC Development isn’t really a bitcoin operator. It’s a SPAC, or special purpose acquisition company, so it raises cash upfront and then hunts for a target. Its stock is still trading mostly like a classic SPAC, tracking its cash value instead of moving with crypto prices.
Bitcoin fell 2.7% to trade around $63,485 after hitting $61,503 at one point. The broader atmosphere remains tough. Coinbase added 0.9%. Strategy climbed 2.6%. MARA Holdings barely moved. Those moves stood out compared to the quieter action in thinly traded BTC Development common shares.
BTC Development pulled in $253 million from its IPO in October 2025, with the money going into a trust account for public holders. The company said it is mainly looking at bitcoin-related businesses or firms that might adopt bitcoin in their balance sheets, capital structures, or operations.
Class A shares and warrants started trading separately on Oct. 16 under BDCI and BDCIW. The unseparated units are still on the market as BDCIU. Warrants are option-like securities that give holders the right to buy stock at a fixed price if certain terms are hit.
BTC Development shares have hovered near $10, and a new filing details why. The company said it hadn’t started operations as of March 31 and won’t see operating revenue until it completes a business combination. BTC reported $257.3 million in marketable securities in trust and listed 25.3 million Class A shares that could be redeemed at $10.17 each. That redemption value is what public SPAC holders can take if they opt out of a deal.
The company posted net income of $1.7 million for the first quarter, with $2.2 million in interest from securities in the trust account. Formation, general and administrative expenses came in at $540,761. It ended March with $1.45 million in cash outside the trust account.
Crypto is still setting the tone for the market. Standard Chartered’s Geoffrey Kendrick kept his $100,000 bitcoin target for year-end, Reuters reported Thursday, even after Strategy’s first bitcoin sale since 2022. Kendrick called it a “painful” week and wrote, “The timing of the sale was a shame.” IG Bank’s Fabien Yip said the trade was “symbolic” because Michael Saylor had always said “never sell.” Reuters
BTC Development isn’t focused on bitcoin’s next price move so much as how softer crypto mood could shift a target’s price, timing, or whether it’s even on the table. A SPAC might seem steady until the deal comes into view for the market.
The risks are clear. If bitcoin keeps sliding or if money keeps moving out of crypto, it could get tougher to set a price, public shareholders might cash out, and warrants could end up diluting investors if a future deal goes through and those securities get exercised. BTC Development also said that weak economy, bad markets or global tensions could weigh on its hunt for a first merger.
BDCI is set to trade like a cash shell with a bitcoin angle until it picks a target. There was not much action in the stock Thursday. Trading elsewhere was busy.