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Wall Street Indexes Face a New Problem: Companies Built on Bitcoin

Wall Street Indexes Face a New Problem: Companies Built on Bitcoin

Index providers are being forced to confront a new problem they were never designed for: companies whose value is driven less by what they produce and more by what they hold.

Few firms embody that tension more clearly than Michael Saylor’s Strategy. The company remains embedded in some of the world’s most influential equity benchmarks, even as its identity continues to drift away from anything resembling a traditional operating business.

Key takeaways

  • Strategy kept its Nasdaq 100 position despite its Bitcoin-centric balance sheet
  • MSCI is reconsidering whether digital asset treasury companies belong in its indexes
  • A removal could force large passive fund sell-offs

This month delivered a mixed message for investors. On one hand, Strategy emerged unscathed from Nasdaq’s latest reshuffle, keeping its position among the 100 largest non-financial companies listed on the exchange. On the other, its future inside MSCI’s global benchmarks remains unresolved, with a decision expected early next year.

The contrast highlights a deeper disagreement among index providers over how Bitcoin-heavy balance sheets should be treated. Nasdaq appears comfortable, for now, classifying Strategy alongside technology companies. MSCI, however, is openly questioning whether firms built around digital asset treasuries belong in mainstream equity indexes at all.

A Business Model That Defies Old Labels

Strategy’s evolution has been dramatic. What began as an enterprise software company now functions, in market terms, as a highly leveraged gateway to Bitcoin exposure. Since 2020, the firm has leaned into aggressive accumulation of the cryptocurrency, turning its stock into a near real-time reflection of Bitcoin’s price movements.

That transformation has fueled both admiration and skepticism. Supporters see Strategy as a pioneering capital allocation experiment. Critics argue that the company increasingly resembles an investment vehicle, blurring the distinction between corporate equity and asset-backed exposure.

Why the MSCI Decision Matters More

MSCI’s pending ruling carries far greater consequences than Nasdaq’s annual rebalancing. Its indexes underpin trillions of dollars in passive investment strategies worldwide. If digital asset treasury companies are deemed ineligible, funds tracking those benchmarks could be forced to sell – regardless of their views on Bitcoin or Strategy itself.

Analysts estimate that exclusion could trigger more than $1.5 billion in outflows tied to Strategy alone, potentially compounding recent weakness in the stock, which remains sharply below last year’s highs.

Industry Pushback Grows

Strategy has not stayed silent. The company has formally opposed MSCI’s review, warning that redefining eligibility criteria midstream risks harming investors who rely on stable, rules-based index construction.

Asset manager Bitwise has echoed those concerns, arguing that introducing subjective judgments about business models undermines the mechanical neutrality index providers are meant to uphold.

A Precedent in the Making

The debate surrounding Strategy is no longer just about one company. It is becoming a test case for how financial markets adapt to firms whose core strategy revolves around digital assets rather than conventional revenue generation.

For now, Strategy remains safely inside the Nasdaq 100, even as other well-known names have been rotated out in favor of companies from entirely different sectors. But with MSCI’s verdict approaching, the question is no longer whether Strategy fits neatly into existing frameworks – it’s whether those frameworks themselves need to change.


The information provided in this article is for educational purposes only and does not constitute financial, investment, or trading advice. Coindoo.com does not endorse or recommend any specific investment strategy or cryptocurrency. Always conduct your own research and consult with a licensed financial advisor before making any investment decisions.

Author
Александър Стефанов - Главен редактор на TradeNews

Reporter at Coindoo

Alex is Editor-in-Chief of Coindoo and co-founder of Millennial Media Group, with nearly a decade of experience covering financial markets - crypto first, then everything else. It started in 2016 with Bitcoin. Like most people at the time, he didn't fully understand it - so he kept digging. Blockchain, tokenomics, the projects, the cycles. That curiosity never stopped, and eventually pulled him into traditional markets too: equities, commodities, macro. Not because he left crypto behind, but because you can't properly understand one without the other. What drives him is straightforward: he wants to know why something is happening, not just that it's happening. Most market coverage stops at the headline - price up, price down, here's a chart. Alex finds that kind of reporting actively unhelpful. If you walk away from an article without understanding the mechanism behind the move, what did you actually learn? He holds a degree in Tourism from New Bulgarian University - not the most obvious path into financial markets, but markets have a way of pulling in people who are simply too curious to stay out. He has authored over 200 in-depth analyses and more than 10,000 articles across crypto and traditional finance. He still thinks every day in markets teaches him something new. That's probably why he hasn't stopped.

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