Strategy Inc. (MSTR) shares climbed Tuesday morning, bouncing back after Monday's crypto carnage and the worst weekly tech slump since April. But don't mistake a single green day for recovery. The stock has cratered over 30% in the past month, and the reason is simple: Bitcoin (BTC) just crashed below $90,000 to hit a six-month low.
The Bitcoin Tether Problem
Here's the thing about Strategy: it's not really a software company anymore. It's a Bitcoin proxy with a corporate structure. The firm is now valued almost entirely on its crypto holdings rather than any meaningful net income from operations. And those holdings just got bigger—Strategy recently dropped another $835.6 million to scoop up 8,178 BTC.
When you tether your shareholder value that tightly to a volatile digital asset, you're going to feel every swing. Bitcoin hits a six-month low? Strategy's balance sheet faces immediate perceived devaluation. The stock got hammered through major support levels near $200, and suddenly everyone's questioning the strategy behind Strategy.
Saylor Stays Bullish
Despite Ethereum (ETH) losing the $3,000 level and broader crypto markets getting pummeled, CEO Michael Saylor isn't backing down. He's stated the company is "always buying" and insists Strategy remains overcollateralized even if Bitcoin were to crash 80% from current levels. That's either confidence or stubbornness, depending on who you ask.
Fundstrat's Tom Lee has argued that MSTR could eventually become a market leader if Bitcoin recovers. But that's a big "if" right now, and the immediate selloff in the underlying asset has accelerated volatility in the stock.
Technical Breakdown
The technical picture isn't pretty. Market data shows MSTR earning a low Momentum score of 5.82, with negative price trends flagged across short, medium, and long-term horizons. When the charts all point down, it's hard to make a bullish case on technicals alone.
Where Things Stand
Strategy shares were trading up 3.62% at $202.49 Tuesday, but context matters. The stock is hovering near its 52-week low of $189.53. A modest bounce after a brutal selloff doesn't change the fact that MSTR has become one of the most volatile ways to get crypto exposure in a traditional brokerage account.
The question for investors now: is this a buying opportunity before Bitcoin recovers, or are we watching a company that's tied itself too tightly to an asset class that just won't stabilize?