
Founder of MicroStrategy, Michael Saylor, recently provided a precise explanation for the growing market concerns over the declining MSTR stock price, pointing out that Bitcoin has been in a bear market for the past four months, and MSTR’s stock price has weakened alongside Bitcoin. Saylor did not mention operational issues or management errors but attributed the decline to Bitcoin’s market cycle. Leverage amplifies the effect: when Bitcoin falls, the negative impact on MSTR is significantly magnified.
Bitcoin’s correction has been substantial and prolonged. It peaked above $110,000 at the end of 2025 but then lost momentum, with prices steadily declining to around $70,000. Months of bullish momentum were wiped out by this sharp drop, market volatility increased, confidence waned, risk assets suffered heavy losses, and panic replaced optimism. Stocks led by Bitcoin were hit hardest, and MicroStrategy was no exception.
From $110,000 down to $70,000, the decline is about 36%, over roughly four months (October 2025 to February 2026). This scale and duration are considered a medium-sized bear market in Bitcoin’s history. For comparison, in 2018, Bitcoin fell from $20,000 to $3,000 (an 85% drop over 12 months), and in 2022, from $69,000 to $15,500 (a 78% drop over 13 months). While the current 36% decline is less extreme, it still qualifies as a bear market rather than a healthy correction.
For MicroStrategy, Bitcoin’s drop from $110,000 to $70,000 means the value of its holdings of over 714,644 BTC has shrunk from approximately $78.6 billion to about $50 billion, evaporating roughly $28.6 billion. This paper loss directly impacts financial statements (via fair value accounting), with a $12.6 billion loss reported in Q4, reflecting this devaluation. When investors see such astronomical losses, panic selling of MSTR shares is a natural reaction.
Book Losses: Valuation of holdings evaporated by $28.6 billion, with a $12.6 billion loss in Q4
Financing Difficulties: Sharp stock price decline makes issuing new shares harder and dilutes existing shareholders
Liquidation Risk: Although not imminent, market fears of continued decline threaten debt repayment capacity
MicroStrategy is not an ordinary company. Its stock price does not simply follow revenue growth nor is it valued by software multiples. Instead, its stock price is closely tied to Bitcoin’s price movements. As of early 2026, the company holds over 250,000 BTC (about 714,644 BTC). Its acquisitions are mainly financed through debt and equity issuance. Therefore, Bitcoin’s price decline impacts MicroStrategy far more than spot Bitcoin trading.
Leverage amplifies outcomes. When Bitcoin rises, MSTR often performs exceptionally well. Conversely, when Bitcoin falls, the negative effects are magnified. Debt is fixed, and concerns about equity dilution re-emerge, prompting market participants to reassess risk. As a result, selling pressure can even surpass Bitcoin’s own sell-off.
How exactly does this “leverage magnification” work? Suppose Bitcoin drops 10%, then the value of MicroStrategy’s holdings drops 10%. But because MicroStrategy has about $5.7 billion in debt, the impact on shareholders’ equity is greater. If holdings fall from $50 billion to $45 billion (a 10% drop), subtracting $5.7 billion debt leaves equity falling from approximately $44.3 billion to about $39.3 billion, roughly an 11.3% decline. This “financial leverage effect” makes MSTR’s volatility inherently higher than Bitcoin’s.
Additionally, market expectations and sentiment around MSTR are amplified. When Bitcoin rises, investors anticipate MicroStrategy will continue buying, pushing its stock price potentially 2-3 times Bitcoin’s increase. But when Bitcoin declines, fears that MicroStrategy might be forced to sell, unable to refinance, or face liquidation cause its stock to fall even more than Bitcoin. This “bull market overperformance, bear market oversell” characteristic makes MSTR a high-beta proxy for Bitcoin.
Currently, MSTR has fallen from a high of about $380 to around $107, a decline of approximately 72%, far exceeding Bitcoin’s 36%. This near 2x decline amplification results from combined leverage and sentiment effects. For investors, this trait is both an opportunity and a risk. If they believe Bitcoin will rebound, buying MSTR could yield higher returns; but if Bitcoin continues to decline, losses on MSTR will be even more severe.
The crypto market’s response to Saylor’s explanation has been mostly positive. Many investors see the explanation as self-evident. However, some point out that market sentiment has experienced extreme volatility. Just weeks ago, Bitcoin hit a record high of $126,000. Now, the mood has shifted entirely to fear-driven discussions. Nonetheless, most analysts believe that MSTR’s decline reflects macro factors affecting Bitcoin rather than operational or business failures.
This explanation alleviates some concerns. Saylor did not mention operational issues or management errors but attributed the decline to Bitcoin’s market cycle. This transparency is, to some extent, responsible. He did not try to sugarcoat problems or make excuses but directly acknowledged that MicroStrategy’s fate is tied to Bitcoin; a Bitcoin bear market will inevitably lead to MSTR’s decline.
However, some critics question whether Saylor’s large purchases at Bitcoin’s peak (e.g., buying 855 BTC at $87,974 each) constitute a “mistake.” If MicroStrategy had bought at lower prices, its average cost would be lower, and current paper losses smaller. But Saylor’s counterargument might be: timing the market precisely is nearly impossible, and consistent dollar-cost averaging is the best long-term strategy.
What does this mean for current investors? Saylor has not hidden his plan. He publicly positions MSTR as a Bitcoin treasury company. This decision involves asymmetric risk. In a bull market, MSTR thrives; in a bear market, it suffers. Investors buying MSTR have essentially accepted this trade-off. Saylor’s observations merely reaffirm reality, not change it.
Looking ahead, realistic expectations are essential. MSTR will not decouple from Bitcoin. Bitcoin’s struggles will not stabilize it. The key to MSTR’s recovery is Bitcoin regaining upward momentum. If Bitcoin enters consolidation or rebounds, MSTR could surge significantly. If Bitcoin weakens further, downside risks for MSTR increase. Risk management is more important than blind optimism.
For those considering investing in MSTR, it’s crucial to understand that this is not a typical publicly traded company but a “Bitcoin leverage investment vehicle.” If you are bullish on Bitcoin’s long-term prospects and can tolerate extreme volatility, MSTR might offer outsized returns. But if you cannot handle paper losses of 50-70% or need liquidity, holding Bitcoin directly may be a better choice.
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