Nakamoto Shuts Its Last Healthcare Clinics to Go All-In on Bitcoin
Nakamoto Inc. (Nasdaq: NAKA) shut down its legacy healthcare clinics on June 19, 2026. The closure marks a decisive step in the company’s transformation into a dedicated Bitcoin (BTC) operating company.
The remaining administrative activities from the wind-down should finish by the end of the third quarter of 2026. That will formally close Nakamoto’s original healthcare business.
Nakamoto Builds a Bitcoin-Native Business Across 3 Verticals
With no healthcare operations remaining, Nakamoto now runs three distinct business lines. These cover media and information services, asset management and financial services, and consulting and advisory services. All three are designed to generate recurring revenue independent of BTC treasury gains. The transition gives Nakamoto a cleaner capital structure with no legacy healthcare liabilities.
The asset management arm, UTXO Management, focuses on public and private Bitcoin markets. In addition, the advisory practice connects corporate and institutional clients with Bitcoin strategy and market insights, according to the company’s announcement.
“With our healthcare clinics now closed, Nakamoto continues to be focused on executing its strategy as a Bitcoin operating company… We are now entirely focused on scaling those businesses and building durable long-term value for our shareholders,” says David Bailey, Chairman and CEO of Nakamoto.
Treasury Under Pressure During Transition
The closure caps a difficult transition for Nakamoto’s BTC treasury. In March 2026, the company sold 284 BTC, booking a $166.2 million fair-value loss (unrealized markdown) for 2025. Then, in June, it sold roughly 600 BTC and Bitcoin derivatives to repay Kraken debt, extending remaining loan maturities into 2027. Following that sale, Nakamoto held roughly 4,467 BTC on its balance sheet.
Despite those pressures, the broader environment for Bitcoin-focused public companies has matured. The MicroStrategy share issuance model has become a reference point for companies building Bitcoin treasuries over traditional buybacks. That approach gained relevance as Nasdaq-listed firms adopted BTC as a core strategic asset.
Meanwhile, discussions around Bitcoin’s quantum security risk have moved from theoretical to policy-level. That adds a longer-term variable for any firm holding significant BTC on its balance sheet.
Nakamoto now enters the second half of 2026 with no non-Bitcoin operations to manage. The NAKA investment case rests on how well its three verticals generate recurring revenue and grow Bitcoin per share. Bailey has committed to growing Bitcoin per share as the primary metric for long-term shareholder value.
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