The Dogecoin Foundation’s corporate arm, House of Doge, has entered into a strategic partnership with Bitstamp by Robinhood, designating the exchange as both trading venue and custodian for the newly launched Official Dogecoin Treasury established by NYSE-listed CleanCore Solutions.
“Bitstamp by Robinhood has long stood as one of the most trusted retail platforms for Dogecoin investors,” said Marco Margiotta, CEO of House of Doge. “By securing the Official Dogecoin Treasury with Bitstamp by Robinhood, we’re not just protecting assets—we’re building the foundation for a Dogecoin financial ecosystem, where holders will soon gain access to broader economic utility applications.”
The treasury was created through CleanCore’s $175 million private investment in public equity (PIPE), with backing from leading industry players including Pantera, GSR, FalconX, Borderless, MOZAYYX, and Mythos. On September 8, it executed its first acquisition, purchasing 285,420,000 DOGE—worth roughly $68 million—cementing its position as the largest institutional Dogecoin treasury less than a week after inception.
CleanCore has announced plans to accumulate up to 1 billion DOGE within 30 days, with a long-term target of holding 5% of Dogecoin’s circulating supply.
The market has responded strongly to these developments. Following the September 8 acquisition, DOGE price broke out of a multi-week symmetrical triangle, surging past its 20- and 50-day moving averages. It went on to print a new swing high near $0.25, just below the 0.382 Fibonacci retracement level, while also clearing the late August local high—signaling renewed bullish momentum.
Currently, DOGE appears to be forming an ascending triangle pattern, with resistance clustered in the $0.24–$0.25 range (aligned with the 0.382 Fib level) and a series of higher lows reinforcing the structure. Immediate support sits near $0.23, where the 0.618 Fib retracement intersects with the triangle’s rising trendline—an area to watch closely for either bullish continuation or potential breakdown.


