Is Strategy about to be kicked out of Wall Street’s most important club?

Strategy (formerly MicroStrategy), the world’s largest corporate Bitcoin holder, is lobbying index provider MSCI against a crucial index exclusion decision due by 15 January.

For context, MSCI is considering removing companies whose business model is centered on buying cryptocurrencies, citing concerns that they function like ineligible investment funds. 

Thus, this high-stakes engagement by Chairman Michael Saylor is more than a simple corporate lobbying effort.

How will MSCI impact Saylor’s Strategy?

If MSCI proceeds, it will establish a major precedent for how passive investment capital views “Bitcoin Treasury” companies, forcing a critical re-evaluation of every public firm using the Saylor playbook and signaling a new regulatory hurdle for corporate crypto exposure.

Strategy’s place in major indices like MSCI USA and MSCI World has been vital to its capital-raising model, guaranteeing steady demand from passive ETFs.

Those inflows have long enabled MSTR to trade at a premium to its Bitcoin [BTC] holdings, allowing the company to issue stock and debt with minimal dilution.

However, that premium is now rapidly eroding. Especially with MSTR down over 37% this year, while Bitcoin has barely moved.

Hence, investor confidence in the leveraged “stock-for-Bitcoin” strategy is weakening just as a new risk emerges. Potential index exclusions could trigger forced selling and intensify pressure on Bitcoin-heavy public firms. 

JP Morgan is also concerned about the Strategy

In fact, JPMorgan is also estimating that Strategy’s removal from MSCI indices could trigger $2.8 billion in forced outflows, potentially $8.8 billion, if other index providers follow.

This mechanical selling would deliver a major hit to MSTR’s valuation and liquidity.

And yet, Saylor has downplayed the threat. He has argued that Strategy is a software company that uses Bitcoin as “productive capital,” not a crypto fund.

Saylor said, 

“It won’t make any difference, in my opinion.”

However, JPMorgan has warned that exclusion would seriously damage investor confidence and hinder the company’s ability to raise future equity or debt.

In a show of confidence, Saylor told Reuters, 

“The equity is going to be volatile, because the company is built on amplified bitcoin. If bitcoin falls … 30%, 40% then the equity is going to fall more, because the equity is built to fall.”

Why is Strategy the biggest Bitcoin corporate holder?

Despite a turbulent week, Strategy did show why it remains Bitcoin’s strongest corporate player. The sell-off, driven by exaggerated wallet-tracking rumors, exposed market fragility, not weakness in the company itself.

With leverage at just 1.11x, Strategy can withstand a 95% BTC crash, giving Saylor the confidence to ignore the panic and keep buying.

However, the fallout extends beyond one firm.

Strategy’s rise inspired copycat companies that lack its liquidity and debt structure. Hence, the downturn now exposes those weaknesses, raising the risk of forced selling that could intensify Bitcoin’s decline.

At the same time, regulators are tightening their grip too. 

Strategy’s stock price and Bitcoin price action

Meanwhile, the numbers speak for themselves.

Even after the violent shakeout, BTC rebounded to $93,057, while MSTR’s stock climbed to $181.33 – A sign that markets still reward clarity over rumor. 

Behind the scenes too, Strategy keeps accumulating, rebalancing custody and maintaining its 438,000 BTC stack while adding hundreds more coins week after week.


Final thoughts

  • Strategy’s decade-long advantage of passive inflows is now at risk, threatening the premium that once powered its capital-raising engine.
  • Copycat firms may face the harshest fallout, lacking Strategy’s leverage controls, liquidity depth, and investor trust.
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Source: https://ambcrypto.com/is-strategy-about-to-be-kicked-out-of-wall-streets-most-important-club/