Japanese company Metaplanet is acting like a kid who keeps collecting baseball cards even when prices fall. The firm stores Bitcoin on its balance sheet instead of cash, and its boss, Simon Gerovich, says the plan has not changed.
When Bitcoin dipped to $60,000 early Friday in Asia, many investors panicked and sold. Metaplanet did the opposite. On social media, Gerovich said the company will keep buying as much Bitcoin as it can, no matter how bumpy the ride gets.
The strategy is costly in the short term. Because Bitcoin has been sliding, Metaplanet is sitting on millions of dollars in paper losses — money lost on paper but not yet realized. Nervous shareholders reacted quickly: the company’s stock fell about 8% at the opening bell.
Metaplanet is not alone. U.S. firm Strategy (formerly MicroStrategy) — run by Michael Saylor — is also deep into Bitcoin. It currently faces more than $4.5 billion in unrealized losses, yet Saylor has also promised to keep buying. Both companies treat Bitcoin like long-term treasure rather than quick cash.
Why Bitcoin is sliding
Bitcoin has been in a clear downtrend. After touching a record high in October, the price has erased nearly 50% of its value. Fear has replaced excitement across crypto markets.
Several forces are pushing prices lower: weaker risk appetite from investors, uncertainty about interest rates, and heavy selling from traders who want to protect profits. Every time Bitcoin tries to rebound, fresh selling pressure pulls it back down.
Even when the price briefly bounced from $60,000 toward $63,000, the move felt fragile rather than powerful. Large institutions are hurting, but so are small retail traders who bought near the top.
For a ten-year-old, think of Bitcoin like a very tall tower made of blocks. It rose quickly, but now many blocks are being removed, and the tower is shrinking fast.
What traders expect next
Most traders are not optimistic in the short term. On prediction market Polymarket, about 76% of bettors think Bitcoin will fall below $55,000 in the coming days.

Professional analysts are even more bearish. Bank Stifel warned that Bitcoin could sink to around $38,000, a level last seen in 2021. They based this call on past crashes in 2018 and 2022, when Bitcoin also fell sharply after big rallies.
Still, big Bitcoin buyers like Metaplanet believe downturns are temporary. Their bet is simple: buy low now, hope for much higher prices later.
Key numbers to remember:
- $60,000 — recent low for Bitcoin
- 8% — Metaplanet’s stock drop
- 76% — traders expecting a fall under $55k
- $38,000 — analysts’ worst-case target
Bottom line:
Metaplanet is choosing patience over panic. While prices are crashing and confidence is shaky, the company keeps stacking Bitcoin — betting that today’s pain could become tomorrow’s payoff. Whether that bet succeeds will depend on how deep this crypto winter goes.


