MicroStrategy stock tumbled more than 9% on Thursday to its lowest level since February 2024, dragging its preferred equity down nearly 25% since January as Bitcoin crashed below $60,000. The selloff erased over half of Bitcoin’s value from its October 2025 peak above $126,000, while U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs bled $1.3 billion in a single week—the largest weekly redemption of 2026.
What Happened
Bitcoin hit an intraday low of $58,131 on Thursday—its lowest level since September 2024—before recovering to around $59,460, down 2.6% on the day. The cryptocurrency has now fallen below $60,000 for the third time this year, driven by a record 13-day streak of ETF outflows totaling over $4.3 billion. MicroStrategy’s common stock closed at $81.92, down 4% on the session and more than 8% below its November 2024 record high of $543. Its Series A preferred shares have plunged nearly 25% since January 13 to an all-time low.
Roughly $10 billion in Bitcoin derivatives bets are set to expire this week, with analysts at CryptoQuant warning that MicroStrategy should halt its Bitcoin purchases and rebuild cash reserves instead. The firm’s strategy of buying during every dip has resulted in “rapid unrealized loss growth,” according to the analytics firm. Meanwhile, U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs have seen seven consecutive weeks of net outflows, with total assets under management shrinking from $113 billion at year-end to $77.5 billion.
Why It Matters
The MicroStrategy selloff signals a broader reassessment of corporate Bitcoin treasury strategies. When the company’s stock trades at a shrinking premium to its Bitcoin holdings, the arbitrage that fueled its ascent reverses—forcing potential Bitcoin sales to meet margin calls or redeem preferred shareholders. This creates a feedback loop: Bitcoin drops → MSTR drops → forced Bitcoin sales → Bitcoin drops further.
The ETF outflow data reveals institutional investors are stepping back after months of accumulation. A 30-day outflow of $6.4 billion—the largest on record—suggests the “real money” cohort is reducing exposure, not rotating. Combined with $1.3 billion in weekly futures liquidations and the Fear & Greed Index at 13 (extreme fear), the market structure looks fragile. Ethereum slipped 6%, while XRP and Solana each dropped 8–10%, confirming a broad-based risk-off move rather than Bitcoin-specific weakness.
What’s Next
All eyes are on the $55,000–$58,000 support zone. A daily close below $55,000 could trigger the “cascade” scenario flagged by JPMorgan analysts, with $50,000 as the next major level. For MicroStrategy, the critical question is whether Michael Saylor pivots to capital preservation—as CryptoQuant advises—or doubles down. Saylor insisted Friday he remains “focused on Bitcoin,” but with preferred equity at record lows and common shares at a two-year trough, the margin for error is evaporating. The expiring $10 billion in options this week adds another volatility catalyst.
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