Steven Barrett
Registered User
- Messages
- 5,350
isn't the deal with MSTR that it's a leveraged bet on bitcoin?
I originally bought MSTR because I can't buy BTC directly in my PRSA. Using MSTR as a proxy lets me trade without taxable events.Even if BTC increases in value, they could have done better by buying BTC directly.
I can do another comment about MSTR trading at higher than NAV - that's a whole other can of worms.
if bitcoin doesn't go up, they can just get the original principle back.
"But what if bitcoin goes down so much that MSTR can't pay back the principle?" well it's possible, but as I understand it the bondholders also tend to have hedging shorts on MSTR to soften this. But in any case, bitcoin has to go pretty low for MSTR to be really in trouble at this point,
if you think bitcoin isn't going to continue succeeding you shouldn't be interested in MSTR - it's for people who want exposure to bitcoin succeeding.
I originally bought MSTR because I can't buy BTC directly in my PRSA. Using MSTR as a proxy lets me trade without taxable events.
If we consider what MSTR was originally doing it was just converting treasury funds to bitcoin and then the value of the bitcoins started eclipsing the *intrinsic* value of the company. On the face of it you'd then expect the company to trade something like an ETF where the share price reflects value of Bitcoin + underlying business (negligible) less debt. So it should trade roughly at NAV.Surely that is the main point? Whatever about a 10% premium for the convenience, a premium >100% cannot be justified.
ATM issuance of stock to capture that premium and further increase the btc/share, and this may be where your ponzinomics alarm starts going off.
Perhaps there are.There is very good reason why you are not allowed to invest your pension in BTC.
I am, because I found an even better reason to do so - the market was grossly mis-pricing the odds of the FTX failure as an extinction event for BTC, and also mis-pricing MSTR to the extent that it traded at a *discount* to NAV when I bought this tranche for example:And you are ignoring these reasons, by investing in it via a proxy.
I have taken more than my original investment off the table, but that was not much.You got in early and must have made a lot of money. So get out now before it collapses. You can't get the timing right. It will probably go up further before it collapses.
Oh I already have more than enough exposure to self-custodied bitcoin as you can imagine from my history posting here, MSTR was just a way toYou can get direct BTC exposure outside the pension fund.
Yes, because I've realised Saylor isn't likely to stop, he can't stop, so the outcome for MSTR is probably fairly binary in the long run, much higher or much lower, and increasing btc/share mathematically cannot go on forever because eventually you would have all the bitcoin, so one question is how long before the 'btc yield' as Saylor calls it reduces to the extent that the only NAV premium that makes sense is pretty close to 1 and what are the consequences for future convertible bonds if that happens, OR can he find other ways to monetise the absolutely enormous stack of btc they're accumulating.Never mind my alarm. How about your alarm? Has it gone off yet?
In any case I see no short term existential risk for MSTR in isolation, since they don't even have any debt due until I think 2029.
Sorry if I'm spamming too many comments, but I've another point to make about this. The fixed income market can only buy fixed income instruments. The capital allocated to that market cannot buy bitcoin directly, and it turns out it's a pretty massive market, and it seems to want some exposure to bitcoin.People actually bought €3b in bonds in MicroStrategy
They pay no interest
You can convert these bonds into MicroStrategy stock if the stock rises by 70%
If you think that Bitcoin is going to rise in value, why would you not just buy Bitcoin directly?
The fixed income market can only buy fixed income instruments. The capital allocated to that market cannot buy bitcoin directly, and it turns out it's a pretty massive market, and it seems to want some exposure to bitcoin.
MSTR borrowing against their software recurring revenues.
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