Michael Saylor has reiterated that Strategy faces no risk of forced liquidation, even in an extreme scenario where Bitcoin’s price collapses to $1.
According to Saylor, the company’s balance sheet is deliberately structured to avoid the margin call dynamics that typically devastate leveraged crypto investors during deep market drawdowns.
His comments come as Bitcoin trades near Strategy’s average acquisition cost, reviving concerns among market participants about potential forced selling from large corporate holders.
Saylor emphasized that Strategy’s Bitcoin exposure differs fundamentally from leveraged trading positions or collateralized crypto loans.
The company currently holds 712,647 BTC, and none of this Bitcoin is pledged as collateral. Because the holdings are fully unencumbered, price declines do not trigger automatic liquidation mechanisms. There are no margin thresholds, loan-to-value requirements, or collateral maintenance clauses tied to Bitcoin’s market price.
In addition, Strategy’s $8.2 billion in outstanding debt is composed primarily of unsecured convertible notes with long maturities ranging from 2027 to 2032. Creditors do not have the contractual right to force asset sales based on short-term market volatility, even during prolonged bear markets.
To further reinforce its financial resilience, the company maintains a $2.25 billion cash reserve, designated to service interest payments and dividend obligations related to its preferred stock (STRC). This cash buffer provides substantial operational runway even if Bitcoin remains depressed for an extended period.
As of February 1, 2026, Strategy’s Bitcoin position sits just above breakeven following the recent market sell-off.
The company’s average cost basis is estimated at approximately $76,038 per BTC, while Bitcoin is trading near $78,800, placing the portfolio roughly 2% above breakeven. While this proximity has drawn attention, it does not alter the firm’s structural immunity to forced liquidation.
Unlike hedge funds or retail traders using leverage, Strategy does not face liquidation cascades driven by price thresholds. Any decision to sell Bitcoin would be discretionary rather than mechanically enforced.
Saylor’s remarks reinforce a long-standing message: Strategy is positioned as a long-duration Bitcoin holder, not a leveraged market participant. The company’s capital structure is designed to withstand extreme volatility without triggering forced asset sales, even under scenarios that would wipe out most leveraged entities.
While market conditions may continue to pressure the firm’s unrealized gains or losses, the absence of margin risk means Strategy’s Bitcoin thesis remains intact regardless of short-term price movements.
As Bitcoin navigates its current drawdown phase, Saylor’s stance highlights a key distinction in the market: price volatility alone does not equal liquidation risk when leverage is removed from the equation.
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