Solmate Infrastructure shares collapsed more than 98% from their post-financing peak after the company's $300 million pivot into a Solana-focused digital asset treasury triggered governance disputes and shareholder lawsuits, underscoring the risks of public companies replicating the crypto treasury model beyond Bitcoin.
"The board engaged in self-dealing by issuing shares at a 65% discount to net asset value without an independent fairness opinion or competitive process," RBCH Ltd., the largest outside shareholder and an entity linked to RockawayX founder Viktor Fischer, said in a statement. RBCH filed a derivative lawsuit in New York on June 22, alleging breach of fiduciary duty and shareholder oppression.
Solmate, formerly known as Brera Holdings, raised $300 million in September 2025 through a private investment in public equity backed by ARK Invest, Pulsar Group, RockawayX and the Solana Foundation. The Nasdaq-listed company planned to accumulate SOL tokens, stake them for yield and develop validator infrastructure in Abu Dhabi. It also agreed to acquire $50 million worth of SOL from the Solana Foundation at a 15% discount. The stock initially rallied on the announcement but has since reversed sharply, with shares trading near $4.72 on June 26.
The collapse reflects a broader unwinding of the crypto treasury trade. After Strategy's success with Bitcoin, dozens of companies used public equity markets to accumulate tokens and trade at premiums to their holdings. Solmate's bet on Solana proved riskier — SOL has fallen 44% year-to-date and trades near $68, down from levels seen during the prior cycle. The company also faces governance turmoil: Institutional Shareholder Services recommended voting against all five directors at the June 26 annual general meeting, citing lack of board independence and a poison pill designed as "a general defense against shareholder activism." RockawayX has sued Pulsar-linked board members over alleged self-dealing, while Solmate has accused RockawayX of making false financial claims. Key figures including economist Arthur Laffer and former Chief Executive Marco Santori have resigned. The company has sold or discontinued legacy football assets — its teams in Mozambique and Mongolia were shuttered, and its stake in Italian club Juve Stabia was sold for €1 plus liabilities — reporting a net loss of about €378,000 in 2025.
The Solmate case serves as a cautionary tale for the broader crypto treasury sector. Investors are increasingly distinguishing between companies with durable operating platforms and those whose value depends mainly on holding volatile tokens. When dilution, insider disputes and token-price weakness converge, equity-market premiums can collapse rapidly — a dynamic that has now claimed one of the most ambitious Solana treasury experiments.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.