Sequans Communications announced on May 28, 2026 that it has completed the full redemption of its convertible debt by selling a portion of its Bitcoin holdings, effectively ending the company’s digital asset treasury strategy and refocusing on its core IoT semiconductor business.
The France-based chipmaker, listed on the NYSE under SQNS, said it used Bitcoin sales to retire the remaining convertible debentures originally issued in July 2025. Sequans still holds approximately 658 unrestricted BTC but stated it will monetize those holdings over time rather than maintain them as a treasury reserve.
Why Sequans abandoned its Bitcoin reserve
The Bitcoin treasury strategy was always tied to the company’s debt structure. In July 2025, Sequans issued convertible debentures totaling $189 million. By November 2025, the company had sold 970 BTC to redeem 50% of that debt, reducing the outstanding balance to $94.5 million and its holdings from 3,234 to 2,264 BTC.
The announcement marks a notable reversal. As recently as that November redemption, CEO Georges Karam said “our Bitcoin treasury strategy and our deep conviction in Bitcoin remain unchanged,” even while the company was actively unwinding its position.
A February 2026 SEC filing formalized the endgame: Sequans disclosed plans to redeem the remaining $94.5 million in debentures by June 1, 2026, drawing from a 1,617 BTC collateral account. The unwind was effectively pre-programmed around that deadline.
By April 30, 2026, Sequans held 1,114 BTC valued at $84.9 million, with 817 BTC pledged against the remaining $35.9 million of convertible debt. The final sales between late April and May brought holdings down to 658 BTC and extinguished the debt entirely.
Bitcoin traded at $73,615 at the time of the announcement, with the broader market sitting in “Extreme Fear” territory at a Fear and Greed Index score of 22.
Why Sequans is pivoting back to IoT chips
With the debt cleared, Sequans said capital allocation will now center on its IoT semiconductor business and its 5G eRedCap product roadmap. Karam framed the shift as a return to fundamentals.
“We have strengthened our balance sheet, simplified our capital structure, and are now fully focused on scaling our IoT semiconductor business.”
Georges Karam, CEO of Sequans Communications
The company described itself as “near debt-free” rather than fully debt-free, a distinction worth noting. But the convertible debentures that had anchored the Bitcoin strategy are now fully retired.
Sequans’ trajectory contrasts with companies moving in the opposite direction. Firms like SharpLink Gaming have leaned into crypto-linked treasury approaches to gain index inclusion, while Sequans is choosing operational focus over digital asset exposure.
How clearing debt changed the company’s direction
The timeline shows the strategy exit was methodical, not reactive. The November 2025 partial redemption, February 2026 SEC filing, and May 2026 final redemption followed a structured sequence tied to the convertible debt’s terms.
Each step reduced both the debt burden and the Bitcoin position simultaneously. Sequans never faced a forced liquidation; it sold BTC on its own timetable to meet self-imposed redemption milestones. The collateral account structure disclosed in SEC filings gave the company flexibility to manage the unwind without market disruption.
The decision to abandon the treasury strategy entirely, rather than rebuild it after clearing debt, signals that management views IoT semiconductors as the higher-return use of capital. Even as institutional Bitcoin infrastructure expands, with developments like CME moving Bitcoin futures to 24/7 trading, Sequans is making a company-specific capital allocation choice rather than a broader judgment on Bitcoin’s viability.
The move also comes as other sectors of the crypto market continue to evolve. Projects like Optimism testing stake-based gas priority on its mainnet reflect the ongoing pace of blockchain infrastructure development, a space Sequans has opted to leave behind.
Sequans said it will sell the remaining 658 BTC “over time,” leaving open the possibility that final dispositions could stretch into the second half of 2026.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.
















