Cantor Equity Partners 1 Gains 25% on $3.5B Bitcoin Deal With Adam Back
The FT reported overnight of an imminent agreement with the Bitcoin OG to provide CEPO with 30,000 BTC.

What to know:
- Cantor Equity Partners 1 (CEPO) is trading sharply higher since an FT report hit late yesterday of an investment by Bitcoin pioneer Adam Back.
- According to the story, Back will help seed CEPO with 30,000 bitcoin belonging to him and his company Blockstream Partners.
- Far from being a liquidity event for Back, the move is another example of his desire to bring Bitcoin adoption more into the mainstream, said CoinDesk Senior Analyst James Van Straten.
Cantor Equity Partners I (CEPO) is changing hands just shy of $15 in morning U.S. action, up about 25% from the $12 level it traded at prior to a late-Tuesday story from the FT that the company and Adam Back were nearing a $3.5 billion funding deal.
To review, CEPO is the blank check bitcoin treasury company headed by Brandon Lutnick — chairman of Wall Street investment bank Cantor Fitzgerald and son of Trump administration Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick.
According to the FT report, Cantor Equity Partners 1 would acquire 30,000 BTC (nearly $3.5 billion at current prices) from Back. In return, Back would receive equity in the vehicle, which would be renamed BSTR Holdings. CEPO is also seeking to raise another $800 million of additional capital to acquire even more BTC, the report said.
Back cashing out?
Cynics might believe that the move signals a desire by Back — one of Bitcoin's OGs whose cryptography work was used by the network's creator Satoshi Nakamoto — to cash in on some of his vast BTC holdings.
This couldn't be further from the truth, according to CoinDesk Senior Analyst James Van Straten.
"Far from being a mere liquidity event for Back, this partnership underscores his long-term conviction that Bitcoin should become a core asset class in traditional finance portfolios," said Van Straten. "Rather than cashing out, Back seems intent on leveraging institutional vehicles to push Bitcoin further into the financial mainstream, bridging the gap between btc-native innovation and Wall Street capital."
Van Straten further noted that Back has invested his own cash in the funding of other bitcoin treasury strategy companies. "This deal reinforces the notion that Back’s priorities lie in expanding Bitcoin’s institutional use cases, not simply realizing gains on his holdings," he concluded.
More For You
'We do not do illegal things': Inside a U.S.-sanctioned stablecoin issuer's race to build a crypto giant

Oleg Ogienko, the public face of A7A5, pitched the ruble-pegged stablecoin as a fast-growing trade rail built to move money across borders despite sanctions pressure.
What to know:
- Oleg Ogienko, the public face of ruble-denominated stablecoin issuer A7A5, insists the firm complies fully with Kyrgyz regulations and international anti-money-laundering standards despite extensive U.S. sanctions on its affiliates.
- A7A5, whose issuing entities and reserve bank are sanctioned by the U.S. Treasury, has grown faster than USDT and USDC and aims to handle more than 20 percent of Russia’s trade settlements, primarily serving businesses in Asia, Africa and South America trading with Russian partners.
- Ogienko said that he and his team were developing partnerships with blockchain platforms and exchanges during Consensus in Hong Kong, though declined to name specifics.











