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Why the Term ‘Active Treasury’ Hides Dangerous Risks - Crypto Economy
Digital asset treasury companies were built on a simple premise: buy Bitcoin, hold it, and wait. That model worked while firms kept their exposure passive and boards understood their only risk to be market volatility. By 2026, that phase has ended. A quiet shift is now reshaping how these companies operate. They stake tokens, buy alternative cryptocurrencies, and run validator nodes. Each new activity adds layers of responsibility that go far beyond what directors originally approved.
The pressure to do more comes from competition. Simple exposure to Bitcoin no longer generates the returns it once did, and treasury teams need to justify their existence. Reports from 2025 and 2026 show that a growing number of DATCOs have moved into more volatile tokens in search of higher yields. On the surface, diversifying across several altcoins seems like a way to spread risk. In practice, these assets tend to move together under stress. Liquidity evaporates across the board at the same time, turning a diversified portfolio into a collection of correlated bets. What appears as sophistication often ends up being concentration in disguise.
Active management has become the industry’s answer to the question of why treasury teams are still needed. Firms now rotate tokens, time their entries and exits, and make allocation decisions based on historical data. Each trade can be justified in isolation, but taken together these activities transform a holding company into something closer to an unregulated investment fund. The line between corporate treasury and delegated investment management begins to blur, and boards rarely have the tools to oversee that transition.
Some DATCOs have gone further by participating directly in blockchain infrastructure. They run validator nodes, help secure networks, and vote on protocol changes. The yield from these activities is secondary. The main duty is operational: keep the node running, maintain uptime, and manage private keys. A validator that fails faces slashing, a penalty automatically enforced by the protocol.
The loss of tokens is only part of the damage. The company also suffers reputational harm and may compromise infrastructure that other institutions depend on. These are not abstract technical problems. They are business risks of a different order than market volatility, yet they are often managed without formal controls.
This evolution leaves DATCOs in an ambiguous position
They are not quite operating companies with established controls, nor are they structured as investment funds with fiduciary duties. Index providers such as MSCI now debate how to classify these firms, and the uncertainty reflects a deeper reality: the market does not know whether to treat them as businesses or as vehicles for capital allocation. The ambiguity matters because it affects how they are regulated, how auditors assess them, and how investors evaluate their risk profiles.
The infrastructure needed to run these activities safely does not yet exist in institutional form. Legacy systems were not designed to handle staking income, token holdings, and compliance obligations under a single mandate. Ad hoc wallets, spreadsheets, and loosely governed smart contracts are not enough. To operate at scale, DATCOs need systems that separate duties between execution, custody, and risk oversight.

They need audit-ready records and real-time visibility into correlated exposures and protocol-level failures. Traditional custody providers built secure storage for private keys but did not build tools for protocol governance or automated staking decisions. DeFi platforms offer functionality but not controls. Node providers supply infrastructure but not governance frameworks.
Without those guardrails, active treasury management becomes a form of leverage without accountability. If DATCOs want to avoid being treated as unregulated investment vehicles, they must adopt fund-grade controls. That means clear disclosure of strategy and risk, segregation of duties, independent oversight, and stress tests that model correlated drawdowns and operational failures, not just price drops. Boards must formally recognize protocol exposure and governance participation as core risks rather than experimental add-ons.

The ongoing consultation at MSCI is not a threat to the sector. It is a signal that the easy phase is over. As DATCOs move from passive holding to active operations, the market will demand clarity about what these companies are and what risks they carry. Some firms will find that the short-term gains from active strategies do not justify the risks they took on. Those that pursue yield without proper controls may discover that classification was the least of their problems. By the time the market reacts, the risks will already be embedded in their systems, waiting for the next downturn to appear.
The solution requires regulatory clarity, but it also requires that boards accept the change in their own companies. A firm cannot be a passive holder and an active operator at the same time. The market will eventually force a choice. Making that choice now, with full awareness of the risks, is better than discovering it during a crisis.