Bitcoin Giant Strategy Records $12.4 Billion Q4 Loss as MSTR Shares Hit 18-Month Low

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TL;DR

MicroStrategy reported a $12.4 billion Q4 loss as Bitcoin's price decline caused nearly $9 billion in unrealized losses on its holdings. Despite the downturn, executives emphasize their long-term Bitcoin strategy and continue accumulating BTC, while investor concerns grow over stock performance and potential asset sales.

Key Takeaways

  • MicroStrategy recorded a $12.4 billion Q4 net loss with Bitcoin trading below its average purchase price of $76,000
  • The company holds 713,502 Bitcoin valued at $45.4 billion but faces nearly $9 billion in unrealized losses
  • Executives maintain a long-term 'HODL' strategy despite stock price dropping 71% over six months
  • Investor concerns include potential Bitcoin sales and the company's leveraged position as a Bitcoin proxy
  • MicroStrategy has established cash reserves to cover preferred stock dividends for 30 months

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Michael Saylor, founder and chairman of Strategy. Image: Swan Bitcoin/YouTube/Decrypt

Strategy announced fourth-quarter earnings against a precarious backdrop on Thursday, with losses mounting on paper for the Bitcoin-buying firm amid the asset’s latest slide.

With Bitcoin trading around $63,000, the company faces an unrealized loss of nearly $9 billion on its holdings, which were valued at around $45.4 billion. After spending $54.2 billion on Bitcoin since 2020, the asset’s price dipped below Strategy’s average purchase price of $76,000 earlier this week.

"It's important to emphasize that our strategy is built for the long term," Strategy Chief Financial Officer Andrew Kang said during an earnings call on Thursday. "It's built to withstand short-term price volatility, even short-term extreme conditions like we're seeing today, and importantly, even in a volatile environment, we continue to execute."

Strategy generated a fourth-quarter net loss of $12.4 billion, or $42.93 per share, as Bitcoin tumbled from an all-time high above $126,000 in October. Throughout the three-month period ended Dec. 31, the company added around 35,000 Bitcoin to its corporate coffers.



In advance of its latest earnings results, Strategy shares plunged more than 17% to $107, according to Yahoo Finance. That represented their lowest level in a year and a half. The company’s stock price has plummeted by around 71% over the past six months.

“Strategy has built a digital fortress anchored by 713,502 Bitcoin, and our shift to digital credit, which aligns with our indefinite Bitcoin horizon," Strategy co-founder and Executive Chairman Michael Saylor said in a statement to shareholders.

Saylor, known for his buy-and-never-sell attitude toward Bitcoin, posted “HODL”—or “hold on for dear life” in crypto lingo—on X before the earnings results were released. Over the years, the phrase has become a rallying cry for die-hard crypto enthusiasts.

Saylor’s bullishness may be steadfast, but investors have grown increasingly frustrated with the firm as shares have fallen 76% from a high of $457 last year. Other observers fear that Bitcoin could come under further strain if Strategy decides to sell its BTC holdings, which Saylor acknowledged as a possibility last year.

Strategy’s swoon has outpaced Bitcoin’s 44% decline over the past six months, leaving investors wary of the company, which has positioned itself as a leveraged Bitcoin bet, having accumulated its stockpile through a combination of preferred shares and convertible debt.

Last year, the company established cash reserves to address concerns that it might not be able to make dividend payments on its preferred stock. With $2.25 billion in the bank, Strategy’s website says the funds can cover dividend payments for 30 months.

Strategy President and CEO Phong Lee highlighted the adoption of Strategy’s variable-rate preferred share, or STRC. He described the product, which currently pays 11.25% monthly, as the company’s “flagship Digital Credit instrument,” valued at $3.4 billion.

Meanwhile, the company’s enterprise value has approached the value of its Bitcoin holdings, yielding a so-called mNAV of 1.1, per Strategy’s website. Strategy’s measurement takes into account its debt and cash, while other metrics focus solely on market capitalization. In that sense, Strategy has been valued at a discount to its Bitcoin since late November.

As that premium has vanished over the past year, it’s become increasingly difficult for the company to increase the amount of Bitcoin that it owns per share by issuing common stock, among its most common moves.

Traders on Myriad, a prediction market owned by Decrypt’s parent company DASTAN, penciled in a 32% chance on Thursday that the company will sell some of its Bitcoin holdings this year. That represented a notable increase from 10% a week ago.

Editor's note: Updates story with Kang's comments from earnings call

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