Strategy says it can endure a bitcoin plunge to $8,000 without jeopardizing its debt obligations, underscoring the company’s aggressive accumulation strategy and fortress balance sheet as it navigates volatility and reinforces long-term confidence in its crypto-heavy treasury model.
Strategy Inc. (Nasdaq: MSTR), the world’s largest bitcoin treasury company, shared on social media platform X on Feb. 15 that it can withstand a decline in bitcoin’s price to $8,000 and still maintain enough assets to fully cover its outstanding debt.
The firm wrote:
“Strategy can withstand a drawdown in $ BTC price to $8K and still have sufficient assets to fully cover our debt.”
“Convertible Debt Notes have staggered maturities & put dates between 2027-32,” the company detailed: “Strategy plans to equitize existing convertible debt over time and avoid issuing additional senior debt.”
An accompanying chart showed that at a $69,000 bitcoin price, Strategy holds about $49.3 billion in bitcoin reserves against $6.0 billion in net debt, reflecting an 8.3x coverage ratio. Under an extreme 88% decline to $8,000 per bitcoin, the graphic indicated reserves would still total roughly $6.0 billion, matching net debt and implying 1.0x coverage.

During a CNBC interview last week, Strategy CEO Phong Le addressed the company’s $17 billion unrealized quarterly loss and outlined when selling bitcoin could potentially become a consideration. “My message is to hold on. We’ve been through bitcoin downturns in the past,” he said, emphasizing prior 50% to 75% drawdowns. He described the loss as a mark-to-market accounting impact rather than a cash shortfall, stating: “It’s a GAAP loss.” Le added:
“If bitcoin goes down to $8,000 for 5 years, maybe then we start to have issues around whether we need to sell bitcoin, but the GAAP loss isn’t really something we’re concerned about.”
He pointed to approximately $2.25 billion in cash and 10% to 12% leverage, characterizing Strategy’s position as a “fortress balance sheet,” while Executive Chairman Michael Saylor reiterated a long-term accumulation approach.
Yes, Strategy says its bitcoin reserves would still match its $6.0 billion in net debt at that price.
At $69,000 per bitcoin, Strategy reports an 8.3x coverage ratio against its net debt.
The loss was described as a GAAP mark-to-market accounting impact, not a cash shortfall.
CEO Phong Le said prolonged prices around $8,000 for five years could potentially force that discussion.
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