Understanding The Math Behind MicroStrategy

 | Sep 21, 2022 11:41AM ET

  • MicroStrategy's big bet on Bitcoin now drives the value of MSTR stock
  • Value in the operating business seems thin barring a change
  • The case for MSTR is simple: it’s a leveraged play on the underlying cryptocurrency
  • Broadly speaking, MicroStrategy Incorporated (NASDAQ:MSTR) is one of four ways for investors to play Bitcoin. Each has its advantages and disadvantages.

    Obviously, investors worldwide can own Bitcoin directly. But network fees and commissions remain rather high on most regulated exchanges. Simply buying and (eventually) selling the coin can eat up a mid-single-digit percentage of the capital invested. Bitcoin ownership generally requires some level of security as well.

    There are a pair of liquid funds as well. Grayscale Bitcoin Trust (OTC:GBTC) owns Bitcoin directly. But management fees are 2% per year, and those fees can erode returns, particularly if Bitcoin rises over a period of years. The ProShares Bitcoin Strategy ETF (NYSE:BITO) has lower fees of just 0.95% per annum but invests in Bitcoin futures rather than offering direct ownership.

    And then there’s MSTR stock. To be sure, MicroStrategy is not purely a play on Bitcoin. The company’s software business, founded in 1989, has generated $500 million in revenue over the past four quarters. But with a stash of Bitcoin now worth almost $2.5 billion, it’s the crypto that drives the value of the overall company, and thus of MicroStrategy stock.

    How Bitcoin can drive that value is something every investor, and potential investor, in MSTR stock must understand.

    h2 The Basic Math/h2

    At the end of the second quarter, MicroStrategy had $69 million in cash on the balance sheet. The company also owned 129,699 Bitcoin (it rounded up to 130,000 this week in a small transaction). At the current price ($18,886.30 as of this writing), at the end of Q2, the stash was worth $2.45 billion.

    But those purchases have been funded by borrowings. On June 30, 2020, MicroStrategy had $421 million in cash on its balance sheet, and zero debt. Since then, the company has borrowed $2.375 billion, all of which has gone to buying bitcoin. Earlier this year, the company even secured a $205 million term loan that was backed by the bitcoin it had purchased with other borrowed funds.

    So far, the strategy hasn’t necessarily been a winner. MicroStrategy on average has paid just more than $30,000 for Bitcoin that now trades below $19,000. On paper, the company has a loss of some $1.4 billion.

    h2 Bitcoin And MSTR From Here/h2

    Given that paper loss, an investor might expect that MSTR stock has been a loser since it began buying the cryptocurrency. That actually hasn’t been the case. Here’s how MSTR has traded against Bitcoin since Aug. 10, 2020, the day before the software company made its initial investment of $250 million:

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