I recently came across an interesting case. Japanese publicly listed company KLab officially launched a "Dual Asset Allocation Plan" on December 27 — in simple terms, they are investing in both BTC and gold, betting on both sides.
The financing scale is 5.1 billion yen, with 3.6 billion yen (about $24 million) allocated for asset allocation, split in a 60/40 ratio: 60% in BTC and 40% in gold. This is not just on paper; they are actually taking action.
As of December 25 data: they purchased an additional 3.17 BTC, with an average cost of 13.83 million yen per BTC (approximately $90,000), and their total holdings now reach 4.37 BTC. Simultaneously, they allocated 1,860 shares of gold ETF, leaving no gaps.
At first glance, this approach seems simple and straightforward, but there is a strategy behind it. BTC is a highly elastic asset in the crypto market, with high volatility and potential; gold is a classic safe-haven asset, stable and reliable. One is the main attack, the other is the defensive line; together, they form a flexible allocation that can both attack and defend.
Many people tend to focus on single-point breakthroughs when allocating assets — either going all-in on BTC or holding onto fiat currency stubbornly. But this company’s approach is different: when the market rises, BTC can boost overall returns; when the market falls, gold can hold the bottom line. In the long run, this indeed enhances risk resistance.
What’s even more interesting is that this reflects a larger trend — even listed companies are starting to treat Bitcoin as a serious reserve asset, no longer just experimental items within small circles. This shift is worth paying attention to.
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Hash_Bandit
· 4h ago
ngl this dual-asset play hits different... klab's not just yolo'ing into btc like some corp, they're actually hedging with gold. reminds me of the early days when we'd argue endlessly about correlation metrics lol
Reply0
ChainProspector
· 12h ago
This is the correct approach to asset allocation—it's not just all in or all out; you really need to consider some strategies.
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PretendingToReadDocs
· 12h ago
Japanese listed companies are starting to hoard cryptocurrencies; mainstream adoption is really here.
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RugpullSurvivor
· 12h ago
Selling gold and calling it a day, going all-in on BTC is the real way to go.
View OriginalReply0
AirdropFatigue
· 12h ago
Haha, a 6:4 allocation is indeed stable, but I still think the BTC ratio is a bit conservative. If it were up to me, I would push it to 7:3 or higher.
I recently came across an interesting case. Japanese publicly listed company KLab officially launched a "Dual Asset Allocation Plan" on December 27 — in simple terms, they are investing in both BTC and gold, betting on both sides.
The financing scale is 5.1 billion yen, with 3.6 billion yen (about $24 million) allocated for asset allocation, split in a 60/40 ratio: 60% in BTC and 40% in gold. This is not just on paper; they are actually taking action.
As of December 25 data: they purchased an additional 3.17 BTC, with an average cost of 13.83 million yen per BTC (approximately $90,000), and their total holdings now reach 4.37 BTC. Simultaneously, they allocated 1,860 shares of gold ETF, leaving no gaps.
At first glance, this approach seems simple and straightforward, but there is a strategy behind it. BTC is a highly elastic asset in the crypto market, with high volatility and potential; gold is a classic safe-haven asset, stable and reliable. One is the main attack, the other is the defensive line; together, they form a flexible allocation that can both attack and defend.
Many people tend to focus on single-point breakthroughs when allocating assets — either going all-in on BTC or holding onto fiat currency stubbornly. But this company’s approach is different: when the market rises, BTC can boost overall returns; when the market falls, gold can hold the bottom line. In the long run, this indeed enhances risk resistance.
What’s even more interesting is that this reflects a larger trend — even listed companies are starting to treat Bitcoin as a serious reserve asset, no longer just experimental items within small circles. This shift is worth paying attention to.