When you own more Bitcoin than any other public company on Earth, a bad day for $BTC is a very bad day for your balance sheet. Strategy, the company formerly known as MicroStrategy, watched over $690 million in value evaporate from its Bitcoin treasury as the price of $BTC fell below $75,000.
Strategy holds hundreds of thousands of Bitcoin. At its peak valuation, that stash was worth around $65 billion, a figure that would make it one of the most valuable single-asset positions held by any public company.
When $BTC dropped below the $75,000 mark, the resulting paper loss exceeded $690 million. Nobody sold anything, but the spreadsheet got a lot uglier overnight.
Under older GAAP accounting rules, the company had already recorded total Bitcoin impairment charges of roughly $690 million. Those rules required companies to write down digital asset holdings when prices dropped but didn’t let them mark the value back up when prices recovered. Newer fair-value accounting standards have since changed the game, allowing companies to reflect both gains and losses in real time.
The Strategy playbook: buy more
Strategy’s response to price drops has historically been the same: buy more Bitcoin. The company has continued making nine-figure Bitcoin purchases even during periods of significant market volatility.
To fund this accumulation, Strategy launched a $4.2 billion at-the-market issuance program for its preferred stock. The company is effectively issuing equity to investors and funneling the proceeds straight into $BTC.
What this means for investors
For investors holding Strategy shares, the question isn’t whether Bitcoin will recover from its dip below $75K. It’s whether the company’s leveraged approach to accumulation creates outsized risk during prolonged downturns. Issuing billions in preferred stock to buy a volatile asset works beautifully when prices go up. When they go down, those obligations don’t shrink alongside the portfolio.
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