Jiuzi Holdings, a Hangzhou-based electric vehicle manufacturer listed on Nasdaq under the ticker JZXN, announced an agreement to acquire 10,000 BTC valued at approximately $1 billion through an equity-for-Bitcoin swap with an unnamed global digital asset investor.
The structure is straightforward on paper. A strategic investor transfers 10,000 BTC directly to Jiuzi. In return, that investor receives equity in Jiuzi valued at roughly $1 billion. No cash changes hands. The company gets Bitcoin on its balance sheet. The investor gets a stake in a Nasdaq-listed Chinese EV company.
Beyond the asset transfer, both parties are establishing what the announcement describes as a long-term collaboration covering cross-border cryptocurrency settlement, liquidity management, and ecosystem coordination. The Bitcoin acquisition is framed as a treasury strategy, with Jiuzi positioning itself as a gateway for institutional digital asset finance.
The custody question is answered explicitly in the announcement: Jiuzi will not self-custody the Bitcoin, instead using third-party regulated custodians. That is a reasonable policy. It is also the kind of detail companies include when they anticipate the question being asked.
Here is the problem analysts flagged immediately. Jiuzi Holdings is a small-cap Chinese EV company. Its historical market capitalization has been a fraction of $1 billion. The deal calls for issuing equity valued at approximately $1 billion in exchange for the Bitcoin.
If the company’s market cap before the announcement was well below $1 billion, then issuing $1 billion in equity either implies massive dilution of existing shareholders, a post-announcement valuation that the market has not yet validated, or a valuation methodology for the equity consideration that differs from current market price. None of those explanations are impossible. All of them raise questions the announcement does not answer.
The transaction remains subject to definitive agreement execution and standard SEC reporting requirements, which means it is not closed, not final, and the details that would resolve these questions have not yet been publicly filed.
This is not Jiuzi’s first crypto move. In late 2025, the company announced a partnership with SOLV Foundation to deploy up to $1 billion into yield-bearing Bitcoin products through the SolvBTC.BNB vault. The company also established a Crypto Asset Risk Committee led by CFO Huijie Gao and brought in blockchain veteran Dr. Doug Buerger as COO to oversee the treasury initiative.
The sequence matters. A small-cap manufacturer with limited cash reserves has announced, within roughly a year, a $1 billion yield-bearing Bitcoin deployment partnership and now a $1 billion equity-for-Bitcoin acquisition. Both are round numbers. Both involve unnamed or loosely described counterparties at announcement. Both generated retail trading volume and share price movement on the news.
That does not make the deals fraudulent. It does make them worth scrutinizing carefully when the definitive agreements are actually filed with the SEC.
This deal did not happen in isolation. It lands on the same day Trump pressured banks to accommodate crypto, OKX launched equity perpetuals, and the stablecoin market is generating billions in annual revenue on Ethereum. The macro tailwind for crypto treasury strategies is real and visible right now. MicroStrategy’s model of accumulating Bitcoin on a corporate balance sheet has been validated repeatedly by share price performance, and smaller companies across multiple sectors are attempting to replicate it.
The question with Jiuzi is not whether the strategy makes sense in the abstract. It is whether this specific company, with this specific balance sheet, has the capacity to execute a $1 billion transaction legitimately. Small-cap stocks announcing large crypto treasury strategies without commensurate financial capacity have a mixed track record. Some are genuine pivots. Some are designed primarily to generate trading volume.
The SEC filings, when they come, will answer which this is.
The post Chinese EV Maker to Acquire 10,000 BTC: Here Is Why Analysts Are Skeptical appeared first on ETHNews.


