The Clock Is Ticking on the ‘Bitcoin Treasury’ Model
The passive investment machinery that powers global markets has turned its sights on crypto balance sheets. With a consultation deadline looming on December 31, global index provider MSCI is weighing a rule change that would classify companies holding over 50% of their assets in digital tokens as non-operating entities. If enacted, the move could trigger an estimated $15 billion in forced selling, primarily targeting Strategy Inc. (formerly MicroStrategy) and its peers.
This isn’t just a classification tweak, it is an existential threat to the corporate Bitcoin adoption playbook pioneered by Michael Saylor. Markets are already pricing in the risk: Strategy Inc. (MSTR) traded softly at $160.38 (-1.5%) alongside a broader crypto cool-off, with Bitcoin hovering near $86,000.
The 50% Cliff
MSCI’s proposal introduces a specific designation: “Digital Asset Treasuries” (DATs). Under the draft rules, any company exceeding the 50% digital asset threshold would be booted from the MSCI Global Investable Market Indexes. The logic? These firms behave more like investment funds than operating companies.
The implications for capital flows are mechanical and severe. Trillions of dollars in ETFs and mutual funds track these indices blindly. If MSTR is removed, those funds must sell. JPMorgan analysts peg the potential capital flight from Strategy Inc. alone at $2.8 billion.
The ‘Strategy’ Defense
The resistance has mobilized under the banner of Bitcoin For Corporations. The coalition, which lists Strategy Inc., Strive Asset Management, and Japan’s Metaplanet among its 1,000+ signatories, argues the rule violates the principle of index neutrality. Their counter-argument is simple: companies heavy in real estate or commodities aren’t subjected to similar “fund-like” tests.
“A shareholder-approved treasury strategy should not erase a company from global equity benchmarks,” noted George Mekhail, Managing Director of Bitcoin for Corporations, in the coalition’s formal opposition letter.
Institutional Context
This battle highlights the growing friction between legacy financial plumbing and the new digital asset economy. For years, MSTR served as a proxy for institutional Bitcoin exposure. Now, that very feature is its liability. If MSCI proceeds with the exclusion in its February 2026 review, it could force a repricing not just of Strategy Inc., but of the entire “Bitcoin Treasury” sector, chilling corporate adoption just as regulatory clarity was beginning to emerge.
A final decision is expected by January 15, 2026.