MicroStrategy (MSTR), known as the company with the largest
Bitcoin
(BTC) reserves worldwide, has launched a "BTC Rating" dashboard to provide reassurance to investors during a period of extended stock selloffs and heightened Bitcoin price swings. This initiative comes as the company faces increasing questions about its financial setup, with its share price having fallen nearly 70% from its 2025 high and
Bitcoin trading near $87,000
, which is only 15% higher than the firm's average purchase price of $74,400 for its 649,870 BTC. The dashboard demonstrates that even if Bitcoin were to fall to the company's average cost, its holdings would still cover its convertible debt by 5.9 times, and
at $25,000, coverage would remain at 2.0x
. This so-called "BTC Rating" is designed to measure the company's capacity to meet its debt obligations in uncertain markets.
The ongoing selloff has significantly reduced MSTR's premium over its net asset value (NAV), as
investors shift toward direct Bitcoin exposure
instead of using equity alternatives. Large institutional players, including major asset managers such as Vanguard and BlackRock, have
reduced their MSTR holdings by $5.38 billion
from Q2 to Q3 2025, signaling a strategic move as spot Bitcoin ETFs and other regulated custody options become more popular. This shift has put additional downward pressure on MSTR shares, which now, by some measures, trade below the value of their Bitcoin holdings,
despite the company's assertion
that it continues to serve as a "productive capital" platform.
The company's debt arrangements further complicate the picture.
MSTR
has
raised $20 billion in convertible notes
since 2020, including $1 billion in 0.625% notes due in 2028. The first significant test will come in September 2027, when note holders can request repayment in cash if the share price remains below the $183.19 conversion threshold.
Analysts estimate that forced outflows could reach $2.8 billion
should MSCI remove MSTR from its major indices, with further risks if the Nasdaq 100 follows.
Michael Saylor, the company's chairman, has
doubled down on Bitcoin despite the downturn
, stressing that the company's "hodl strategy" and diverse funding sources equip it to handle extended market turbulence. Analysts from institutions such as TD Cowen, including Lance Vitanza, have
maintained bullish ratings
on MSTR, highlighting its strong debt coverage and strategic Bitcoin accumulation. Still, critics caution that the company's leverage and dependence on perpetual preferred equity could heighten risks if Bitcoin's value continues to drop.
The upcoming MSCI index review on January 15, 2026, is a crucial moment. The index provider is considering whether companies like MSTR, whose treasuries are dominated by digital assets, should stay in major indices, given that
Bitcoin constitutes over 90% of MSTR's total assets
. Being dropped from the index could spark passive outflows, increasing market stress. Saylor has argued that MSTR is a "publicly traded operating company," not a fund or trust, and has
stressed its $500 million software business
as a stabilizing factor against crypto market swings.
Although MSTR's financial safeguards remain robust, the wider industry faces systemic threats. Smaller digital asset treasury firms, including FG Nexus and ETHZilla, have
resorted to selling crypto holdings
to finance share buybacks, exposing the weaknesses of leveraged corporate crypto treasuries during downturns. Analysts have compared these vulnerabilities to the leverage-driven crises of 2008.
For MSTR, its future depends on Bitcoin's price trajectory and the results of the MSCI review. If Bitcoin holds above $90,000, MSTR may continue to attract investors as a leveraged Bitcoin play. However, if prices fall below $74,400 for an extended period, the company's financial strength will be put to the test,
even as its BTC Rating metrics suggest it remains far from insolvency
.