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Grant Cardone’s investment firm, Cardone Capital, has expanded its Bitcoin portfolio by acquiring an additional 282 BTC worth approximately $18 million, according to Cardone’s post on X stating: “CardoneCapital adding 282 BTC.” The purchase was made as Bitcoin fell sharply to around $62,000 amid heightened geopolitical tensions tied to the Israel-Lebanon conflict, aligning with the firm’s stated “buy the dip” approach.
This acquisition follows a prior purchase by Cardone Capital of 130 BTC valued at nearly $9.7 million during an earlier market pullback. Together, the transactions underscore the firm’s continued effort to increase exposure to Bitcoin as a long-term investment asset.
Cardone Capital has also been expanding its real estate holdings alongside its cryptocurrency exposure. During the Consensus 2026 conference in Miami, Grant Cardone said the company added another $100 million worth of Bitcoin as part of a larger transaction that included approximately $235 million in real estate acquisitions.
Cardone described a “unique investment model” that combines Bitcoin with income-producing real estate within a single business structure. He said the assets have been merged within a limited liability company (LLC), creating a hybrid investment vehicle intended to leverage the strengths of both asset classes.
Cardone also argued that traditional real estate investment trusts (REITs) generally cannot hold Bitcoin on their balance sheets, which he said gives his strategy a competitive advantage. He estimated potential gains between 22% and 32%.
The strategy has reportedly drawn investors who are largely new to cryptocurrency. Cardone said roughly 80% of participants in the fund had no prior Bitcoin holdings before investing.
Cardone Capital’s commitment to digital assets is not new. In 2025, the firm purchased 1,000 BTC worth more than $100 million. The company has also disclosed plans to tokenize portions of its real estate portfolio, as it continues to integrate crypto assets with traditional real estate investments.
Bitcoin (BTC) investors who use steady dollar-cost averaging (DCA) may be underperforming versus strategies that adjust exposure to the market’s cycle, according to new research arguing that Bitcoin’s behavior differs from traditional long-duration assets.
In a report cited by Markus Thielen of 10x Research, Bitcoin’s market…