Key Takeaways:
A U.S.-listed company has raised new capital through convertible notes and warrants backed by major crypto investors.
The funds will be used to build a treasury of digital assets, starting with Solana-based tokens.
The offering structure provides equity upside for investors while limiting risk through conversion terms.
The initiative marks a shift toward on-balance-sheet token holdings within regulated public market frameworks.
Janover has raised approximately $42 million through a private offering of convertible notes and warrants focused on the Solana ecosystem, according to an announcement published on April 7.
The notes carry a 2.5% annual interest rate and mature in 2030. They can convert into common stock once the company’s market capitalization reaches $100 million, with the conversion price set at the market close on that day, subject to a floor.
Solana Positioned as Core Asset
According to the press release, each $1,000 note comes with warrants to purchase shares at fixed prices above current trading levels.
Crypto-focused firms including Pantera Capital, Kraken, and Arrington Capital have joined the round, along with other institutional and angel investors.
The funds will support Janover’s expansion into digital asset acquisition, beginning with tokens in the Solana ecosystem. The company is positioning this strategy within the structure of U.S. public markets.
The structure of the offering allows early backers to gain equity exposure while retaining downside protection.
For Janover, the strategy opens a path to grow digital holdings without relying on direct token issuance or offshore structures.
“Bitcoin has and always will be the most powerful store of value, but Solana is the foundation for an entirely new, high-performance financial system,” said Janover’s newly appointed chairman and CEO Joseph Onorati.
“While bitcoin is optimized for security and scarcity, Solana is optimized for speed, usability, and programmability,” said Onorati.
Janover Targets Digital Assets Through U.S. Public Markets
Janover’s leadership change coincides with a strategic shift toward holding digital assets on the balance sheet.
The CEO described the initiative as a long-term commitment to Solana rather than a short-term trade.
Onorati said the company plans to begin acquiring SOL immediately. While he did not disclose specific timing or volume, he emphasized that the approach would be deliberate and aligned with the broader Solana network.
The structure will be “transparent, methodical, and deeply aligned with the Solana ecosystem,” he said.
Janover’s approach gestures at a broader question facing smaller public companies: how to participate in digital asset markets without stepping outside the bounds of regulatory convention.
By structuring exposure through capital markets, rather than direct token issuance or offshore entities, the company is testing how far existing frameworks can stretch.
It also puts public-market discipline in conversation with open-source financial infrastructure.
As more companies explore token treasuries not just as hedges, but as strategic holdings, the boundary between corporate finance and decentralized networks becomes harder to define.
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