But Saylor is unfazed.
BTC has fallen 45% from its October all-time high of $126,080, leading some to question at what point Strategy—which owns around 3.4% percent of the Bitcoin supply—may be forced to liquidate assets to service debt or pay its dividends.
Yet predictors on Myriad aren’t certain the firm will escape the year without hitting the sell button. As of Thursday, predictors give the firm around a 28% chance of selling BTC before the end of 2026, though that mark is down around 7% in the last seven days as Bitcoin rebounded from its recent lows near $60,000.
“If Bitcoin falls 90% for the next four years, we’ll refinance the debt. We’ll just roll it forward,” he said. “You’re at $68,000 right now. It literally has to fall to $8,000, and then we’ll just refinance the debt.”
“If you think it’s going to zero, then we’ll deal with that,” he added. “But I don’t think it’s going to zero, and I don’t think it’s going to $8,000 either.”
Shares in the firm (MSTR), which Saylor likened to “amplified Bitcoin,” are down around 2.7% in trading on Tuesday and now down nearly 66% in the last six months, changing hands recently around $134.58.
















