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Cover image for Strategy (MSTR) Earns S&P ‘B-’ Rating, Marking a Major Milestone for Bitcoin-Backed Credit

Strategy (MSTR) Earns S&P ‘B-’ Rating, Marking a Major Milestone for Bitcoin-Backed Credit

Bitcoin Magazine Strategy (MSTR) Earns S&P ‘B-’ Rating, Marking a Major Milestone for Bitcoin-Backed Credit For the first time in financial history, a major credit rating agency has formally evaluated a company built on a bitcoin-backed credit model. In news covered by Bitcoin Magazine, the S&P Global Ratings has assigned Strategy Inc (MSTR) a ‘B-’ Issuer Credit Rating with a Stable outlook, recognizing not just the company, but the emergence of Bitcoin as collateral inside the credit system. This marks a watershed moment for corporate finance. Bitcoin-backed credit is no longer theoretical. It is now a rated financial reality. Why This Moment Matters Until now, Bitcoin had been accepted by equity markets, ETFs, and corporate treasury conversations — but credit markets remained untouched. Credit markets are where legitimacy is ultimately decided because they determine who can borrow, at what cost, and against which assets. By rating Strategy Inc, S&P has implicitly acknowledged: Bitcoin can underpin structured debt and preferred equity. A bitcoin-backed credit strategy can be modeled, rated, and priced using traditional frameworks. Bitcoin is shifting from speculative asset to recognized collateral within corporate capital structures. This is not a marketing milestone — it is a structural one. Bitcoin has entered the language of risk-adjusted return, yield, and covenants. How S&P Interpreted Strategy’s Bitcoin-Backed Capital Model The rating is speculative grade, but the Stable outlook is critical. It signals S&P’s belief that Strategy can continue to service obligations and access capital markets without selling its Bitcoin reserves — a foundational principle of bitcoin-backed credit. S&P’s analysis mentions several possible weaknesses: High concentration of assets in Bitcoin Low U.S. dollar liquidity and negative risk-adjusted capital under S&P’s methodology Currency mismatch: long Bitcoin, short U.S. dollar debt obligations Limited operating cash flow outside software revenue However, they also credited Strategy with unique structural strengths: No near-term debt maturities before 2027–2028 Proven access to capital markets — both equity and debt A capital stack purpose-built to accumulate Bitcoin without diluting shareholders Active liability management via convertible debt and preferred stock instruments In short, S&P is signaling that bitcoin-backed credit can function — if managed with discipline. Implications for the S&P 500 and Institutional Legitimacy Strategy Inc met the S&P 500 inclusion criteria in profitability and market capitalization but was passed over in 2024, widely believed to be due to its Bitcoin-heavy balance sheet. That decision now appears less defensible. With a formal credit rating, the company shifts from “unrated anomaly” to “rated issuer.” For institutional capital, that distinction matters. Index committees can now reference a risk rating — not just a narrative. Treasury teams and insurers can benchmark exposure to bitcoin-backed credit against traditional corporate debt. This increases (not guarantees) the probability of future index inclusion and passive capital flows. Bitcoin entering equity indices begins with Bitcoin entering the credit models behind them. Bitcoin-Backed Credit: The Ideal State of Treasury Strategy This rating does more than validate Strategy — it validates the architecture of bitcoin-backed credit as the superior evolution of corporate treasury management. Phase 1 was equity-funded Bitcoin accumulation — high growth but shareholder dilution. Phase 2 introduced convertible debt and preferred equity — allowing companies to acquire Bitcoin through capital markets rather than operating earnings. Phase 3, now underway, is full institutional recognition of bitcoin-backed credit — rated, benchmarked, and capable of scaling. This is the endgame: Use capital markets to borrow in fiat Use proceeds to acquire Bitcoin Service liabilities without selling reserves Increase Bitcoin-per-share over time, without issuing new common stock With S&P formally rating Strategy’s issuer credit, this model moves from innovation to infrastructure. Why Corporate Finance Leaders Need to Pay Attention This rating does not compel companies to adopt Bitcoin. But it removes the claim that Bitcoin cannot be integrated into traditional credit systems. From now on: Bitcoin can be factored into risk-weighted capital models and treasury policy. Credit and liquidity committees must understand how bitcoin-backed credit affects financing costs, refinancing risk, and balance sheet leverage. Investors can now compare Bitcoin-based capital structures against other high-yield or hybrid debt strategies. Boards can no longer dismiss Bitcoin as “unratable” or “unclassified.” A New Chapter for Corporate Finance and Capital Markets What makes this moment different isn’t that another institution “acknowledged” Bitcoin. That’s happened before with ETFs, GAAP accounting changes, and treasury allocations. What’s different is where the recognition has now occurred: Not in equity markets. Not in payment networks. But in credit — the foundation of corporate finance and monetary systems. When a credit rating agency like S&P evaluates a company built on Bitcoin, it does three things that have never happened before: It forces Bitcoin into risk models normally reserved for banks, sovereigns, and investment-grade corporations. It legitimizes bitcoin-backed credit as a structure that can be analyzed, refinanced, and scaled — not dismissed as speculative. It signals to other corporates and lenders that they must now understand Bitcoin not as an investment, but as collateral. This rating does not mean the model is risk-free. It means the model is real enough to underwrite, stress test, and lend against. That is the real inflection point — not that S&P approved of Bitcoin, but that they were forced to measure it. Disclaimer: This content was written on behalf of Bitcoin For Corporations. This article is intended solely for informational purposes and should not be interpreted as an invitation or solicitation to acquire, purchase or subscribe for securities. This post Strategy (MSTR) Earns S&P ‘B-’ Rating, Marking a Major Milestone for Bitcoin-Backed Credit first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Nick Ward.

Cover image for S&P Assigns ‘B-’ Rating to Strategy (MSTR), Citing Bitcoin Exposure and Liquidity Risk

S&P Assigns ‘B-’ Rating to Strategy (MSTR), Citing Bitcoin Exposure and Liquidity Risk

Bitcoin Magazine S&P Assigns ‘B-’ Rating to Strategy (MSTR), Citing Bitcoin Exposure and Liquidity Risk S&P Global Ratings assigned a ‘B-’ issuer credit rating to bitcoin-juggernaut Strategy, reflecting the company’s heavy concentration in bitcoin and limited dollar liquidity. The outlook is stable. S&P said the rating reflects Strategy’s “high bitcoin concentration, narrow business focus, weak risk-adjusted capitalization, and low U.S. dollar liquidity.” The company reported $8.1 billion in pre-tax earnings in the first half of 2025, almost entirely from appreciation in the value of its bitcoin holdings. The firm said in their release that while Strategy’s balance sheet is dominated by bitcoin, its management has prudently staggered debt maturities and maintained flexibility by financing primarily with equity. In other words, this rating means Strategy can meet debt obligations for now but faces significant default risk if market conditions worsen. Strategy — now effectively a bitcoin treasury company — raises capital through equity and debt issuances to purchase and hold bitcoin. Its securities give investors varying exposure to bitcoin across its capital structure. Just today, founder and former CEO Michael Saylor announced a purchase of 390 BTC between October 20 and October 26, spending approximately $43.4 million at an average price of $111,053 per Bitcoin. The firm still operates a small AI-powered analytics business, though it remains roughly breakeven. JUST IN: S&P Global Ratings has rated a #Bitcoin treasury company for the first time — Michael Saylor’s Strategy pic.twitter.com/oP4j5UIJlj — Bitcoin Magazine (@BitcoinMagazine) October 27, 2025 A Strategy first This S&P rating is the first-ever rating of a Bitcoin Treasury Company by a major credit rating agency. According to S&P, Strategy’s risk-adjusted capital ratio was significantly negative as of June 30, 2025, because the agency deducts bitcoin assets from equity in its calculation. Strategy reported $8.1 billion in pre-tax earnings in the first half of 2025. Operating cash flow during the period was negative $37 million. The agency cited several key risks, including a currency mismatch between Strategy’s bitcoin-denominated assets and dollar-denominated obligations such as interest, debt principal, and preferred dividends. S&P also pointed to cybersecurity risks given the company’s reliance on custodians to safeguard its bitcoin. Strategy holds bitcoin valued at roughly $70 billion, against $8 billion in convertible debt, much of which matures beginning in 2028. Annual preferred dividends total about $640 million, which the company plans to fund through additional stock and preferred equity issuance. While Strategy’s access to capital markets remains a core strength, S&P warned that a sharp decline in bitcoin prices or loss of investor confidence could impede its ability to refinance debt or pay dividends, potentially leading to bitcoin sales “at severely depressed prices.” S&P said the rating could be downgraded if access to markets weakens or debt management risks rise. An upgrade is unlikely unless the company improves its U.S. dollar liquidity or reduces reliance on convertible debt. Strategy’s trillion-dollar endgame Earlier this year, Michael Saylor laid out an ambitious plan to reshape global finance through Bitcoin. In an interview with Bitcoin Magazine, Saylor described an “endgame” in which Strategy accumulates a trillion-dollar bitcoin balance sheet, growing 20–30% annually, and uses it as the foundation for a new global credit system. At the core of his vision is scale: with enough BTC on corporate balance sheets, the long-term appreciation of Bitcoin — historically around 21% annually — would supercharge the capital base. On top of that, Saylor sees an opportunity to issue bitcoin-backed credit at yields significantly higher than traditional fiat-based debt, potentially two to four percentage points above corporate or sovereign rates. He argued that over-collateralization could make this system safer than even AAA-rated debt, while simultaneously fueling broader financial growth. Saylor’s vision extends beyond credit markets. As Bitcoin becomes embedded in corporations, banks, insurers, and sovereign wealth funds, public equity indexes could gradually become indirect bitcoin vehicles. This, he says, would benefit equity markets and corporate balance sheets while introducing higher yields and greater transparency into financial products. The implications are broad: savings accounts could yield 8–10% instead of near-zero, money market funds could be denominated in bitcoin, and insurance products could be reimagined around bitcoin collateral. This post S&P Assigns ‘B-’ Rating to Strategy (MSTR), Citing Bitcoin Exposure and Liquidity Risk first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.

Cover image for How a 2014 Essay Shockingly Predicted the Era of Corporate Bitcoin Treasuries

How a 2014 Essay Shockingly Predicted the Era of Corporate Bitcoin Treasuries

Bitcoin Magazine How a 2014 Essay Shockingly Predicted the Era of Corporate Bitcoin Treasuries I. The Forgotten Blueprint In July 2014, when Bitcoin was trading near six hundred dollars and most executives dismissed it as an internet novelty, Pierre Rochard published an essay titled Speculative Attack. It was a dense, Austrian-leaning treatise that argued Bitcoin would not be adopted because it was “better technology,” but because economic reality would force adoption. People would eventually borrow weak money to buy strong money, and in doing so, trigger a chain reaction that undermines fiat itself. A decade later, that mechanism has quietly migrated from individual investors to corporate treasuries. Public companies are now issuing debt and equity not to expand factories or fund acquisitions, but to build Bitcoin treasuries. Bitcoin treasury companies, whether they realize it or not, are executing the playbook Rochard outlined a decade before any of them existed. II. The Austrian Premise: Good Money Drives Out Bad Rochard’s argument rests on a cornerstone of classical monetary theory: Thiers’ Law, the inverse of Gresham’s Law. When markets are free, good money drives out bad. History confirms it—Persian darics, Roman denarii, Florentine florins, British pounds—all displaced inferior currencies through sheer consistency and quality. Austrian economics frames this as spontaneous order. Sound money outcompetes debased money because actors seeking to preserve value migrate toward scarcity and credibility. Bitcoin represents the culmination of that process: Perfect scarcity – a terminal supply of 21 million units. Decentralized issuance – no discretionary authority to expand it. Verifiable integrity – every unit auditable in real time. Under Thiers’ Law, corporations holding melting cash reserves face the same decision individuals once did: retain inferior currency or reprice reserves in the superior one. The market’s invisible hand has become a balance-sheet force. III. The Speculative Attack, Explained In finance, a speculative attack traditionally refers to traders shorting a currency they expect to fail, famously, George Soros versus the British pound. Rochard re-engineered the term. His version was not adversarial but adaptive: borrow the weaker currency, acquire the stronger one, repay later with devalued money. For individuals in 2014, that meant taking a mortgage or car loan in fiat while buying Bitcoin on the asset side. The logic was simple, if Bitcoin’s expected appreciation exceeds the cost of borrowing, the trade is rational. Today, corporations have industrialized the same maneuver: Debt issuance: low-coupon convertible notes denominated in dollars, yen, or euros. Equity offerings: shares sold into markets priced in weakening currency. Reserve conversion: proceeds deployed into Bitcoin. Each step mirrors Rochard’s thought experiment. The balance sheet becomes the instrument of a speculative attack, not on a single nation’s currency, but on fiat money as a system. IV. The Balance Sheet as the Battlefield The first modern execution came from Strategy Inc. (formerly MicroStrategy). Beginning in 2020, it issued billions in convertible debt to acquire Bitcoin, reframing its equity as a leveraged claim on digital scarcity. Its reporting evolved beyond GAAP: metrics like Bitcoin per share and Bitcoin Yield replaced conventional ratios. In Japan, Metaplanet Inc. repurposed a struggling hospitality business into a pure-play Bitcoin treasury company, using public equity raises to accumulate over 5,000 BTC. In Europe, Capital B listed on Euronext Paris, issuing Bitcoin-denominated convertible bonds to fund perpetual accumulation. Others, from Semler Scientific in the U.S. to Smarter Web in the U.K., have followed the same trajectory. Across jurisdictions, the blueprint is identical: Leverage low-yield fiat liabilities. Acquire the highest-integrity monetary asset. Translate appreciation into stronger equity and lower cost of capital. Corporate treasurers are, in effect, waging monetary arbitrage through accounting. V. Reflexivity: The Feedback Loop Rochard Anticipated Rochard described a process in which Bitcoin’s rising value validates its own demand. Once participants perceive its superiority, they act on it, and the resulting price increase confirms their thesis, a textbook case of reflexivity. That dynamic now plays out through capital markets: Bitcoin’s appreciation boosts the equity valuations of treasury companies. Higher valuations enable further capital raises at favorable terms. New proceeds purchase more Bitcoin, tightening supply and sustaining appreciation. Each cycle strengthens the monetary migration. It is no longer retail speculation—it is corporate reflexivity accelerating Thiers’ Law. VI. Praxeology in the Boardroom Austrian economics begins with praxeology, the study of purposeful human action. Every economic choice is an attempt to preserve or increase value under uncertainty. When executives choose to hold Bitcoin instead of cash, they are performing praxeology in real time. This is not ideology; it is rational adaptation. The fiat system penalizes saving and rewards leverage. Bitcoin reverses the incentives: it rewards prudence and long-term orientation. Corporations, like individuals, respond to those incentives. What looks radical through a Keynesian lens appears inevitable through an Austrian one. Hayek once imagined the denationalization of money, predicting that private forms of sound currency would outcompete government paper. What he could not foresee is that the first agents to operationalize his vision would be public corporations, not central banks. VII. The CFO’s Calculus For financial officers evaluating their next decade of capital policy, the question is no longer whether Bitcoin fits their brand, but whether their balance sheet can survive without it. Key strategic considerations: Cost of capital vs. Bitcoin appreciation When debt markets offer sub-5 percent yields and Bitcoin’s compounded appreciation dwarfs that, holding fiat becomes mathematically inefficient. Reserve diversification Treat Bitcoin as a long-duration treasury asset, less liquid than cash but vastly more durable against inflation. Reporting innovation Adopt performance metrics like BTC Yield or mNAV to measure strategic execution in Bitcoin terms, not just fiat accounting. Custody and audit Distribute keys across institutional providers; schedule regular security audits to mitigate counterparty and operational risk. Investor communication Frame the decision as a capital-preservation strategy, not speculation. The market rewards clarity of thesis and discipline of execution. For CFOs, the philosophical becomes practical: ignore the speculative-attack dynamic, and your treasury remains on the wrong side of it. VIII. The Institutional Speculative Attack Rochard ended his essay with a prediction that “good money drives out bad” through waves of adoption culminating in hyperbitcoinization, a phase where “your money is no good here.” He expected it to begin in unstable economies. Instead, it began on Wall Street and Euronext. Public corporations have become the transmission mechanism of monetary change. Each convertible note, each equity raise, each treasury conversion represents a small speculative attack on fiat, a voluntary exit from soft money to hard. Unlike the currency crises of the past, this one is peaceful, permissionless, and cumulative. No government needs to devalue; corporations are doing it pre-emptively by repricing their reserves in Bitcoin. The result is the same phenomenon Rochard envisioned, scaled and institutionalized: the speculative attack as a corporate function. IX. Conclusion: Strategy, Not Rebellion Bitcoin’s advance into the corporate treasury is not an act of defiance but of discipline. It is the logical endpoint of free-market monetary competition described by Austrian economists for a century. Where individuals once front-ran fiat debasement from their laptops, CFOs now do so through bond desks and board approvals. The incentive structure is unchanged; only the scale has evolved. Each balance sheet that migrates to Bitcoin reinforces the thesis that money, like any product, is subject to competitive pressure and creative destruction. Eleven years later, Rochard’s Speculative Attack reads less like theory and more like a playbook for the sound-money era. Disclaimer: This content was written on behalf of Bitcoin For Corporations. This article is intended solely for informational purposes and should not be interpreted as an invitation or solicitation to acquire, purchase or subscribe for securities. This post How a 2014 Essay Shockingly Predicted the Era of Corporate Bitcoin Treasuries first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Nick Ward.

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