Could Strategy Be Forced To Sell Its Bitcoin? Bitwise CIO Says No
Alex Smith
2 weeks ago
Bitwise Chief Investment Officer Matt Hougan is pushing back against one of the loudest bearish narratives around bitcoin treasury company Strategy (MSTR, formerly MicroStrategy): that it could be forced into a liquidation of its roughly $60 billion bitcoin stack. In his latest CIO memo, Hougan writes bluntly that âMichael Saylor and Strategy selling bitcoin is not one ofâ the real risks in crypto.
Will Strategy Sell Its Bitcoin?
The immediate trigger for market anxiety is MSCIâs consultation on whether to remove so-called digital asset treasury companies (DATs) like Strategy from its investable indexes. Nearly $17 trillion in assets tracks those benchmarks, and JPMorgan estimates index funds might have to sell up to $2.8 billion of MSTR if it is excluded.
MSCIâs rationale is structural: it views many DATs as closer to holding companies or funds than operating companies, and its investable universes already exclude holding structures such as REITs.
Hougan, a self-described âdeep index geekâ who previously spent a decade editing the Journal of Indexes, says he can âsee this going either way.â Michael Saylor and others are arguing that Strategy remains very much an operating software company with âcomplex financial engineering around bitcoin,â and Hougan agrees that this is a reasonable characterization. But he notes that DATs are divisive, MSCI is currently leaning toward excluding them, and he âwould guess there is at least a 75% chance Strategy gets bootedâ when MSCI announces its decision on January 15.
He argues, however, that even a removal is unlikely to be catastrophic for the stock. Large, mechanical index flows are often anticipated and âpriced in well ahead of time.â Hougan points out that when MSTR was added to the Nasdaq-100 last December, funds tracking the index had to buy about $2.1 billion of stock, yet âits price barely moved.â
He believes some of the downside in MSTR since October 10 already reflects investors discounting a probable MSCI removal, and that âat this point, I donât think youâll see substantial swings either way.â Over the long term, he insists, âthe value of MSTR is based on how well it executes its strategy, not on whether index funds are forced to own it.â
The more dramatic claim is the so-called MSTR âdoom loopâ: MSCI exclusion leads to heavy selling, the stock trades far below NAV, and Strategy is somehow forced to sell its bitcoin. Here Hougan is unequivocal: âThe argument feels logical. Unfortunately for the bears, itâs just flat wrong. There is nothing about MSTRâs price dropping below NAV that will force it to sell.â
He breaks the problem down to actual balance sheet constraints. Strategy, he says, has two key obligations: about $800 million per year in interest payments and the need to refinance or redeem specific debt instruments as they mature.
Smaller DATs Are The Bigger Problem
On interest, the company currently has approximately $1.4 billion in cash, enough to âmake its dividend payments easily for a year and a halfâ without touching its bitcoin or needing heroic capital markets access. On principal, the first major maturity does not arrive until February 2027, and that tranche is âonly about $1 billionâchump changeâ compared with the roughly $60 billion in bitcoin the company holds.
Governance further reduces the likelihood of forced selling. Michael Saylor controls around 42% of Strategyâs voting shares and is, in Houganâs words, a person with extraordinary âconviction on bitcoinâs long-term value.â He notes that Saylor âdidnât sell the last time MSTR stock traded at a discount, in 2022.â
Hougan concedes that a forced liquidation would be structurally significant for bitcoin, roughly equivalent to two years of spot ETF inflows dumped back into the market. He simply does not see a credible path from MSCI index mechanics and equity volatility to that outcome âwith no debt due until 2027 and enough cash to cover interest payments for the foreseeable future.â At the time of writing, he notes, bitcoin trades around $92,000, about 27% below its highs but still 24% above Strategyâs average acquisition price of $74,436 per coin. âSo much for the doom.â
Hougan ends by stressing that there are real issues to worry about in cryptoâslow-moving market structure legislation, fragile and âpoorly runâ smaller DATs, and a likely slowdown in DAT bitcoin purchases in 2026. But on Strategy specifically, his conclusion is direct: he âwouldnât worry about the impact of MSCIâs decision on the stock priceâ and sees âno plausible near-term mechanism that would force it to sell its bitcoin. Itâs not going to happen.â
At press time, BTC traded at $92,086.
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