Satoshi Nakamoto Statue Arrives at NYSE as Wall Street Embraces Bitcoin
The New York Stock Exchange welcomed a bronze statue of Bitcoin creator Satoshi Nakamoto on Thursday.
Twenty One Capital, the first Bitcoin-native public company listed on the NYSE under ticker XXI, placed the sixth of 21 planned global monuments at the exchange as crypto markets navigate Federal Reserve policy uncertainty.
The installation by artist Valentina Picozzi represents what NYSE officials described as “shared ground between emerging systems and established institutions.”

Twenty One CEO Jack Mallers, who also founded Lightning Network payment provider Strike, said the placement reflects Bitcoin’s evolution from code to cultural phenomenon.
However, according to Bloomberg, the company’s stock tumbled 19% on its Tuesday trading debut following a blank-check merger.
Monument Placement Follows Switzerland Vandalism and Global Campaign
Picozzi expressed astonishment at the achievement, stating the NYSE location exceeded “our wildest dream” for the statue series.
This is such an achievement, even in our wildest dream we wouldn’t think about placing the statue of Satoshi Nakamoto in this location!
— Satoshigallery (@satoshigallery) December 10, 2025
The 6th/21 statues of Satoshi Nakamoto found its home in the NYSE.
Thank youhttps://t.co/iIEvZawAte
The installation comes months after vandals stole and dumped another Satoshi monument into Lake Lugano following Swiss National Day celebrations in August.
Local investigators suspected intoxicated revelers used tungsten carbide cutting disks and petrol-powered angle grinders to sever the welded bronze sculpture from its base, leaving only the feet attached.
At that time, Satoshigallery, the art collective behind the global campaign, offered a 0.1 Bitcoin reward worth approximately $12,000 for information leading to the recovery of the stolen statue.
The group condemned the vandalism while vowing to continue their mission, declaring, “You can steal our symbol but you will never be able to steal our souls.”
The Lugano theft marked the first major incident affecting official Satoshi monuments since Budapest unveiled the world’s first installation in September 2021.

The global campaign aims to install 21 monuments representing Bitcoin’s 21 million coin supply cap, with existing statues in Budapest, El Salvador’s Bitcoin Beach, Tokyo, and now New York.
Budapest’s original bronze bust featured a faceless, hooded figure with a mirrored surface embodying the “we are all Satoshi” symbolism, while Picozzi’s “Disappearing Satoshi” design depicts a seated figure at a laptop that vanishes when viewed from different angles.
Twenty One Capital Faces Market Headwinds Despite Bitcoin Holdings
Twenty One Capital holds approximately 43,500 bitcoins, valued at over $3.9 billion, making it the world’s third-largest corporate holder.
The company merged with Cantor Equity Partners, a special-purpose acquisition company backed by investment firm Cantor Fitzgerald, and chaired by Brandon Lutnick, son of Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick.
The deal included $486.5 million in senior convertible notes and roughly $365 million in common equity through private investment transactions.
Shares opened at $10.74 on Tuesday, below the SPAC’s $14.27 closing price, as digital asset treasury companies face mounting pressure.
Twenty One isn’t a treasury company. We’re a Bitcoin company.
— Jack Mallers (@jackmallers) December 10, 2025
A Bitcoin-native business backed by Tether & SoftBank, built for cash flow, growth, and bitcoin accumulation.
The market will need time to understand who we are because it's never seen anything like us. $XXI pic.twitter.com/gzmmYE3nK2
Despite the volatility, Mallers emphasized that Twenty One differs from rivals by not trading at a premium to net asset value and plans to launch products and utility services beyond simply accumulating Bitcoin.
The company is majority-owned by stablecoin giant Tether and crypto exchange Bitfinex, with minority investment from Japanese technology investor SoftBank Group.
Fed Policy Clouds Bitcoin Rally as Traders Reassess Rate Path
Bitcoin traded at $90,121 Thursday morning, down 2.3% following the Federal Reserve’s third consecutive quarter-point rate cut.
Chair Jerome Powell described the reduction as further policy normalization while projecting only one additional cut in 2026, fewer than investors hoped.
Futures now imply a 78% chance that rates remain unchanged at the next meeting, up from 70% before the decision.
— Cryptonews.com (@cryptonews) December 11, 2025
Bitcoin dipped Thursday even as stocks rallied on the Fed’s rate cut and Powell’s upbeat outlook, with policymakers signalling only modest easing ahead.#CryptoMarket #AsiaMarketOpen https://t.co/JgA2tKe3k5
Speaking with Cryptonews, Ray Youssef, CEO of NoOnes, outlined two scenarios depending on Fed guidance.
“A dovish Fed tone could open the door to renewed risk-on sentiment, triggering a ‘Santa rally’ for digital assets, with BTC reclaiming $100,000,” he said, while warning that “a more cautious or hawkish FOMC message” could “drive a retest of the mid $70,000s, as defensive derivatives positioning accelerates downside moves.”
He emphasized that Bitcoin’s recovery hinges on renewed capital inflows rather than reduced selling pressure, noting ETF inflows remain shallow and market depth thin.
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