Bitcoin Standard Treasury merger vote postponed to July 2

Bitcoin Standard Treasury merger vote postponed to July 2

The shareholder vote on Adam Back's SPAC deal with Cantor Equity Partners gets pushed back amid private placement concerns

Adam Back’s Bitcoin treasury ambitions are running a few days behind schedule. The shareholder vote on the planned merger between Bitcoin Standard Treasury Company and Cantor Equity Partners I has been pushed from June 26 to July 2, 2026, with private placement matters cited as the reason for the delay.

What the deal actually is

The merger pairs BSTR Holdings, the vehicle behind Adam Back’s Bitcoin treasury play, with Cantor Equity Partners I, a SPAC trading under the ticker CEPO. The combined entity is expected to list on Nasdaq under the ticker BSTR.

The transaction is valued at roughly $4 billion. Up to $1.5 billion of that comes through PIPE financing, which stands for Private Investment in Public Equity. Approximately $600 million of that PIPE financing includes 5,021 BTC contributed in-kind, meaning some investors are not writing checks but handing over actual Bitcoin.

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The proposed treasury at launch sits at 30,021 BTC, contributed primarily by Back and Blockstream, the Bitcoin infrastructure company he leads as CEO.

Why the delay matters

The deal was first announced in July 2025, which means it has already been in the pipeline for the better part of a year. Earlier delays were attributed to market volatility and redemption pressures. Private placement issues are now the stated reason for the June 26 to July 2 slip.

A postponed vote gives SPAC shareholders who have the right to redeem shares before a vote closes more time to act. High redemption rates have killed or severely diluted multiple high-profile SPAC deals in recent years, including several in the crypto space.

What investors should watch

The July 2 vote is the near-term catalyst. If it passes with manageable redemptions and the PIPE financing holds, BSTR clears its biggest structural hurdle and moves toward a Nasdaq listing.

The in-kind Bitcoin component of the PIPE deserves particular attention. It signals that some large investors are comfortable deploying BTC directly into a corporate structure rather than converting to cash first.

Back invented Hashcash, the proof-of-work system that directly informed Bitcoin’s mining mechanism, and has run Blockstream since 2014.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

Bitcoin Standard Treasury merger vote postponed to July 2

Bitcoin Standard Treasury merger vote postponed to July 2

The shareholder vote on Adam Back's SPAC deal with Cantor Equity Partners gets pushed back amid private placement concerns

Adam Back’s Bitcoin treasury ambitions are running a few days behind schedule. The shareholder vote on the planned merger between Bitcoin Standard Treasury Company and Cantor Equity Partners I has been pushed from June 26 to July 2, 2026, with private placement matters cited as the reason for the delay.

What the deal actually is

The merger pairs BSTR Holdings, the vehicle behind Adam Back’s Bitcoin treasury play, with Cantor Equity Partners I, a SPAC trading under the ticker CEPO. The combined entity is expected to list on Nasdaq under the ticker BSTR.

The transaction is valued at roughly $4 billion. Up to $1.5 billion of that comes through PIPE financing, which stands for Private Investment in Public Equity. Approximately $600 million of that PIPE financing includes 5,021 BTC contributed in-kind, meaning some investors are not writing checks but handing over actual Bitcoin.

Advertisement

The proposed treasury at launch sits at 30,021 BTC, contributed primarily by Back and Blockstream, the Bitcoin infrastructure company he leads as CEO.

Why the delay matters

The deal was first announced in July 2025, which means it has already been in the pipeline for the better part of a year. Earlier delays were attributed to market volatility and redemption pressures. Private placement issues are now the stated reason for the June 26 to July 2 slip.

A postponed vote gives SPAC shareholders who have the right to redeem shares before a vote closes more time to act. High redemption rates have killed or severely diluted multiple high-profile SPAC deals in recent years, including several in the crypto space.

What investors should watch

The July 2 vote is the near-term catalyst. If it passes with manageable redemptions and the PIPE financing holds, BSTR clears its biggest structural hurdle and moves toward a Nasdaq listing.

The in-kind Bitcoin component of the PIPE deserves particular attention. It signals that some large investors are comfortable deploying BTC directly into a corporate structure rather than converting to cash first.

Back invented Hashcash, the proof-of-work system that directly informed Bitcoin’s mining mechanism, and has run Blockstream since 2014.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.