Over the past 48 hours, a set of viral posts from market commentators like The Kobeissi Letter and Shanaka Anslem Perera have framed MicroStrategy (now legally Strategy Inc) as the ultimate “Bitcoin trap.”
The core claim is simple:
- The company’s market capitalization has fallen below the value of its Bitcoin holdings.
- As a result, Wall Street is valuing the rest of the business – plus its capital structure – at less than zero.
In one widely shared thread, MicroStrategy is described as holding 3.1% of all Bitcoin that will ever exist and yet trading at a 10 billion dollar discount to the value of that hoard. The posts argue that this is the first sustained inversion of the company’s market-adjusted net asset value (mNAV) since it began its Bitcoin strategy, and suggest this could break the whole “public company as a leveraged BTC vehicle” model.
The question is: how much of this is rhetoric, and how much is real?
Is The “Impossible” Situation Actually True?
Independent data backs up the main numerical point.
Recent coverage from outlets like Economic Times and other converges on roughly the same snapshot for early December:
- Strategy/MicroStrategy holds about 650,000 BTC, a position worth around 55–56 billion dollars at recent prices.
- Its equity market cap has traded near 45–46 billion dollars, after a drop of more than 50% from October highs, as shown on MSTR’s quote page.
- The company carries roughly 8.2 billion dollars of debt and several series of high-yield preferred stock.
On a simple “Bitcoin holdings versus market cap” basis, the viral tweets are accurate: the value of the Bitcoin treasury has been greater than the market value of the entire company.
Even after subtracting debt, several analyses estimate that the net value of the Bitcoin stack still exceeds the equity value by a few billion dollars. In that narrow sense, markets are indeed assigning a negative value to the operating software business, the brand, and the corporate structure.
So the inversion is not a myth or a rounding error – it is a real pricing anomaly in the current tape.
How Strategy Built A 650,000 BTC Megatreasury
To understand why this matters, it helps to look at how the company got here.
Since 2020, MicroStrategy has systematically repositioned itself from a conventional business intelligence vendor into a self-described Bitcoin Treasury Company. That evolution culminated in a full rebrand to Strategy Inc, with the company explicitly marketing itself as a way for public-market investors to get leveraged exposure to Bitcoin via equity and preferred shares.
The basic playbook has been:
- Raise capital by issuing common equity, convertible debt, and later high-yield perpetual preferred stock.
- Use that capital, alongside operating cash flows, to buy more Bitcoin.
- Benefit from a positive feedback loop when BTC rises: the stock trades at a premium to its underlying holdings, making it easier to issue more securities at attractive prices.
By late 2025, this approach had produced a 650,000 BTC position, equivalent to about 3.1% of the total eventual Bitcoin supply, according to both company statements and independent coverage.
The whole structure depends on the equity and preferred market being comfortable with two ideas:
- That Bitcoin will compound in value over multi-year horizons.
- That Strategy can keep rolling and servicing its obligations without being forced to sell a large chunk of its BTC at the wrong time.
The NAV inversion challenges both assumptions at once.
Why A NAV Inversion Can Happen – And Why It Is Dangerous
At first glance, it seems irrational that a company holding tens of billions in Bitcoin could trade for less than the value of that Bitcoin. However, from a market-mechanics perspective, several factors can justify a discount, even a steep one.
1. Leverage And Capital Structure Risk
Strategy’s treasury is not a simple pile of spot BTC. It is financed with a mix of:
- Conventional debt (with future maturities and put options on convertible notes).
- Multiple tranches of perpetual preferred stock paying high single- or double-digit coupons.
- Common equity that absorbs volatility first.
Analyses from sources such as 10x Research point out that as Bitcoin falls, the effective leverage of this structure rises. Equity becomes a thinner slice under a large, volatile asset with fixed claims sitting above it.
Markets often price leveraged vehicles at a discount to their net asset value to reflect the risk that, in a severe drawdown, asset sales or dilutive capital raises will be needed to keep the structure intact.
2. Governance, Liquidity And Index Risk
The company’s strategy is unusually concentrated around one volatile asset and a small leadership group. That creates governance and key-person risk that does not exist in a passive ETF.
In addition, there are potential index-related flows. JPMorgan has estimated that if Strategy were removed from major MSCI indices, passive funds could be forced to sell billions of dollars’ worth of shares. That possibility weighs on long-only managers who do not want to front-run an index exit the wrong way.
3. The “Structural Discount To Direct Bitcoin”
Over time, markets may decide that a corporate wrapper holding Bitcoin with leverage, tax considerations, and operational risk deserves a structural discount relative to holding spot BTC directly or via a regulated ETF.
In that light, the current inversion is less “impossible” than a sign that investors are demanding a higher risk premium for Bitcoin in corporate form than for Bitcoin itself.
The 1.44 Billion Dollar USD Reserve And The “We Might Sell” Shift
Another piece of context is Strategy’s recent creation of a 1.44 billion dollar U.S. dollar reserve to support dividend payments on its preferred shares and other obligations. The move was detailed in a company press release and dissected by outlets like Decrypt.
Historically, Executive Chairman Michael Saylor has been outspoken about “never selling Bitcoin.” In the latest updates, management’s tone is more nuanced:
- Strategy’s leadership has said they may sell Bitcoin or Bitcoin derivatives if the company’s mNAV (market-adjusted net asset value) falls below 1 for a sustained period.
- The USD reserve is framed as a way to cover at least a year of dividends without touching the BTC stack, with a longer-term goal of covering two years.
This is effectively a three-layer defence against forced BTC sales:
- Use equity issuance when the stock trades above mNAV.
- Use the USD reserve if mNAV is near 1 and equity issuance is unattractive.
- As a last resort, sell some Bitcoin or derivatives if mNAV falls and obligations cannot be met otherwise.
The viral tweets are reacting to the fact that the mNAV is now flirting with 1 and that management has, for the first time, explicitly acknowledged that selling BTC is on the table under certain conditions.
What The Inversion Implies – For MSTR And For Bitcoin
The implications differ depending on whether you look through the lens of a Strategy shareholder or a Bitcoin holder.
For Strategy / MSTR Shareholders
Key implications include:
- Equity is now a thinner buffer: With the market valuing the company below its net Bitcoin, any further BTC drawdown or widening of the discount hits equity holders first.
- Capital raising is harder: The old model of issuing equity at a large premium to NAV to buy more Bitcoin is under pressure. Issuing stock when the company already trades below net holdings is far more dilutive.
- Preferred and debt investors gain leverage: The more the equity cushion shrinks, the more bargaining power shifts to creditors and preferred holders in any future negotiation.
Several research notes describe the current setup as a kind of closed-end Bitcoin fund with embedded leverage and idiosyncratic risks. In that framework, a discount to NAV is not unusual, but its size and persistence become the key variables.
For Bitcoin Holders
At Bitcoin’s network level, Strategy’s stress does not change the protocol or long-term supply dynamics. However, it does create path-dependent price risk:
- A forced or voluntary sale of even a fraction of 650,000 BTC would be a major liquidity event.
- Markets may start to “test” Strategy’s pain thresholds, especially around its average cost basis (often cited near 74,000–75,000 dollars per BTC) and key balance sheet dates.
In other words, even if the long-term thesis for Bitcoin remains intact, the way it is held matters. A single, highly leveraged corporate holder is a very different risk factor from a broad base of unleveraged long-term wallets.
Three Broad Scenarios From Here
While precise predictions are impossible, the current situation naturally leads to three broad scenarios.
1. Discount Narrows Without Major Forced Selling
In this path:
- Bitcoin stabilises or recovers, lifting the value of Strategy’s holdings.
- The company’s cash reserve and communication reassure markets that it can meet obligations without dumping BTC.
- The equity gradually re-rates, closing much of the discount to net holdings.
This would validate the view that the current inversion was an overshoot driven by panic and macro stress, rather than a structural rejection of the model.
2. Prolonged Discount And Targeted BTC Sales
Here, the discount persists and BTC trades sideways or lower:
- Strategy taps its USD reserve and, at some point, sells a small portion of its Bitcoin or derivatives to meet payouts.
- The sale is manageable in market terms but breaks the psychological “never sell” narrative.
- The stock continues to trade more like a hybrid between a distressed, leveraged BTC fund and a software company.
This scenario would not necessarily be catastrophic for Bitcoin, but it would be a clear warning about the limits of using a public company as a perpetual accumulation vehicle.
3. Adverse Loop: Index Flows, Deeper Drawdown, And Larger Sales
The more pessimistic case combines several pressures:
- BTC falls toward or below Strategy’s average cost basis.
- Index providers remove or reduce the company’s weight, prompting large passive outflows.
- The company is forced to sell a more substantial slice of its BTC or restructure parts of its capital stack.
In that world, Strategy’s model becomes a case study in how reflexive leverage can turn a bullish treasury bet into a source of systemic selling pressure in a downturn.
What This Says About The Bitcoin Treasury Model
Beyond one ticker, the NAV inversion raises broader questions about the “Bitcoin on corporate balance sheets”narrative.
A few takeaways stand out:
- Form matters: Holding Bitcoin inside a leveraged, publicly traded entity is not the same as sovereign or unleveraged corporate holdings. Equity market mechanics, index rules, and capital structure details all matter.
- Premiums are not permanent: For several years, MicroStrategy traded at a premium to its Bitcoin holdings, encouraging copycat strategies. The current discount shows that those premiums can disappear, and even invert, if confidence erodes.
- ETFs change the calculus: With spot Bitcoin ETFs and ETPs widely available, investors have more direct ways to get exposure without assuming corporate idiosyncrasies. That competition can compress or eliminate the “story premium” of a BTC-heavy stock.
In short, the megatreasury experiment is not over, but it is clearly in a more fragile phase.
Conclusion
The viral tweets about MicroStrategy – now Strategy Inc – are not just sensationalism. The headline claim is correct: for the first time, the company’s market cap has slipped below the value of its vast Bitcoin holdings, creating a genuine NAV inversion.
Whether this proves to be a mispricing or a warning depends on what happens next. If Bitcoin stabilises and Strategy can service its obligations without selling BTC, the discount may narrow and the megatreasury model will live to fight another cycle. If, instead, the combination of leverage, index flows and dividend promises forces meaningful Bitcoin sales, this episode could mark a turning point in how markets view corporate Bitcoin strategies.
Either way, the message from the current pricing is blunt: markets are no longer willing to pay a large premium for Bitcoin in corporate form. They now demand compensation for the added complexity and risk. What happens between now and the next major decision points will determine whether this is remembered as a temporary scare – or the moment the “Bitcoin trap” narrative became reality.
Nothing in this article is financial advice. It is a synthesis of public information and scenario analysis intended to help readers understand the mechanics behind the headlines.
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