Marathon Digital Holdings (MARA) sold 15,133 bitcoin worth approximately $1.1 billion between March 4 and March 25, 2026, using the proceeds to repurchase $1.0 billion in convertible notes at a discount and cut its total debt load by roughly 30%.
The move marks one of the largest single BTC liquidations by a publicly traded miner, reducing MARA’s outstanding convertible debt from $3.298 billion to approximately $2.297 billion. MARA stock jumped 10% to 12.6% in premarket trading on March 26 following the announcement.
MARA Offloads 15,133 BTC in Three-Week Sell-Off
MARA executed the bitcoin sales over a 21-day window, liquidating 15,133 BTC at an average price of roughly $72,700 per coin. The company disclosed the transactions in a press release on March 26, confirming the total haul of approximately $1.1 billion.
Prior to the sale, MARA held approximately 53,822 BTC on its balance sheet. The company retains 38,689 BTC after the liquidation, still positioning it among the largest corporate bitcoin holders globally.
The sale comes at a time when the broader crypto market sits in “Fear” territory, with the crypto industry navigating a cautious macro environment. The Fear & Greed Index registered around 30 as of March 26, reflecting lingering unease after 46 days of extreme fear sentiment earlier in the month.
Why MARA Chose to Deleverage Now
MARA directed the $1.1 billion in sale proceeds toward repurchasing two tranches of zero-coupon convertible senior notes due in 2030 and 2031. The company bought back $367.5 million in principal on the 2030 notes for $322.9 million in cash, and $633.4 million in principal on the 2031 notes for $589.9 million.
The repurchases were executed at roughly 9% below par value, allowing MARA to capture approximately $88.1 million in savings. The transactions are expected to close on March 30 and 31, 2026.
After the repurchases settle, MARA’s remaining convertible debt stands at $632.5 million in 2030 notes and $291.6 million in 2031 notes, totaling roughly $2.297 billion, down from $3.298 billion.
MARA Chairman and CEO Fred Thiel framed the decision as a calculated balance-sheet play rather than a loss of conviction in bitcoin.
“By retiring over $1 billion of face value debt at a discount, we captured approximately $88 million in value, reduced potential shareholder dilution, and leveraged our bitcoin holdings to meaningfully de-lever the balance sheet on our terms.”
The zero-coupon structure of these notes meant MARA carried no interest burden on the debt, but the convertible feature posed dilution risk to shareholders if the notes converted to equity. Buying them back at a discount eliminates that overhang while preserving cash.
This approach contrasts sharply with companies in adjacent sectors that have faced scrutiny over their financial disclosures. MARA’s transparency in disclosing the exact BTC count, sale period, and repurchase terms sets a clear standard.
What MARA’s Sale Signals for Miners and the Market
MARA’s decision to sell bitcoin rather than hold through the current market cycle represents a notable departure from the “stack and never sell” playbook that defined public miners during the 2024-2025 bull run. The company still holds 38,689 BTC, but the willingness to liquidate a significant portion suggests management sees balance-sheet strength as more valuable than maximum BTC exposure right now.
The $1.1 billion sale, spread across 21 days, appears to have been absorbed by the market without triggering outsized price disruption. Bitcoin traded near $71,000 on March 26, up roughly 4% over the prior 24 hours, suggesting institutional buyers were present on the other side.
Thiel also hinted at a broader strategic pivot, stating the transaction “increased our strategic optionality as we expand beyond pure-play Bitcoin mining into digital energy and AI/HPC infrastructure.” No operational details accompanied that claim, but it aligns with a trend across the mining sector as companies like Core Scientific and Riot Platforms explore diversification into AI data center operations.
MARA’s approach stands in direct contrast to Strategy (formerly MicroStrategy), which has continued accumulating bitcoin without deleveraging. The divergence highlights a growing split in corporate bitcoin treasury philosophy: pure accumulation versus active balance-sheet management.
With the repurchases closing on March 30-31, MARA exits March with a cleaner balance sheet, nearly $90 million in captured discount value, and a still-substantial bitcoin treasury. Whether other miners follow MARA’s lead in trading BTC reserves for debt reduction may depend on how credit markets and bitcoin prices behave heading into Q2 2026.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.
