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Michael Saylor, CEO of
(MSTR), has dismissed concerns that the company's inclusion in major equity indices could trigger massive outflows if excludes it from benchmarks. Saylor emphasized that is an operating company with a $500 million software business and a $7.7 billion Bitcoin-backed digital credit program, . His comments come amid JPMorgan's warning that from its indices could result in $2.8 billion in outflows, rising to $8.8 billion if other index providers follow suit.The index provider is reviewing whether companies with over 50% of total assets in digital assets should remain in global equity benchmarks. MSTR, which holds 649,870
at an average cost of $74,433 per coin, is at risk of reclassification . JPMorgan analysts noted that $9 billion of MSTR's $59 billion market cap is tied to passive index-tracking vehicles, if excluded. Such a move would likely , and damage MSTR's ability to raise capital.Bitcoin's recent price slump has amplified these risks. After dropping to $82,605 on November 21, Bitcoin has lost over 30% from its October peak,
since its 2024 high. The company's premium to net Bitcoin holdings—once over 2.7X—has collapsed to nearly 1.1, . Saylor's vision of building a $1 trillion Bitcoin balance sheet, leveraging it to issue high-yield credit products, now faces headwinds as macroeconomic pressures and fading Fed cut hopes deepen market fear .Despite the volatility, Saylor remains defiant, calling MSTR a "Bitcoin-backed structured finance company"
. He highlighted the firm's recent issuance of $7.7 billion in digital credit securities, including variable-yield instruments like Stretch ($STRC), to demonstrate its operational complexity . However, analysts argue that index classification is critical for institutional validation. MSTR's presence in the Nasdaq 100 and MSCI World indexes has historically into mainstream portfolios. A removal would not only erode its valuation but also toward crypto-heavy enterprises.The market is now fixating on MSCI's January 15, 2026, decision.
a "mechanical unwinding" of its value proposition, with forced selling from passive funds and increased financing costs for Saylor's Bitcoin purchases. Meanwhile, Bitcoin's path toward $75,000—roughly aligning with MSTR's average acquisition price—could trigger further unrealized losses but is not the primary catalyst for exclusion .As the crypto sector braces for a "crypto winter," MSTR's fate underscores the fragility of narrative-driven valuations in a risk-off environment. With $8.8 billion in potential outflows looming and Bitcoin's technicals deteriorating, the coming months will test the resilience of a company built on the premise of digital gold.
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