How MicroStrategy and Others Are Taking on Billions in Debt to Buy More Bitcoin
BY Coindesk | CORPORATE | 12/17/24 12:30 PM ESTThe analyst who co-wrote this piece owns shares of MicroStrategy
It would be hard to blame anyone for thinking so. While the Saylor-led company began buying bitcoin (BTC) more than four years ago, over the past 10 months MicroStrategy
MicroStrategy
Demand for this convertible paper has been so high that other companies, bitcoin miner MARA Holdings
But that raises a question: Could issuing so much debt eventually become dangerous for these firms, and for the crypto market at large?
"If bitcoin faces a prolonged period of low/declining prices, [the companies] could have to issue more equity and dilute shareholders at an inopportune time ? [or] sell the bitcoin for less than they bought," Quinn Thompson, founder of crypto hedge fund Lekker Capital, told CoinDesk. Thompson added, though, that he doesn't expect the companies to become insolvent.
How convertible notes work
Convertible notes are a financial tool that allows companies to quickly raise funds without needing to provide collateral (as they would for a loan) or to immediately dilute their stock. These bonds are priced based on the interest rate baked into them, the firm?s underlying stock, the volatility of that stock and the firm?s credit worthiness.
For example, in November bitcoin mining firm Bitdeer
In other words, instead of simply buying the company?s shares on the open market, investors can earn a solid yield by holding these notes while also benefitting if the stock surges. Even better, convertible notes come with downside protection. On specific dates, such bonds can be redeemed in cash for an amount equal to the original investment plus interest payments. Put differently, investors are almost guaranteed to get their money back even if the stock plunges before the note matures.
But MicroStrategy?s situation is rather unheard of in that the firm has found demand for convertible bonds at a 0% interest rate even though benchmark U.S. interest rates are closer to 5%. Why? Volatility. Being essentially a leveraged play on bitcoin, MicroStrategy
The stock volatility affects price action in MSTR's convertible bonds and sophisticated market participants are able to score sizable profits by trading that volatility in a market neutral fashion. ?I was on the phone with a convertible note [arbitrage] trader? just to sort of understand what he?s going through with all of this,? Richard Byworth, a convertible bond expert and managing partner at asset management firm Syz Capital, told the On The Margin podcast. ?He said ?Rich, I?ve become a degen crypto trader. ? It?s insane. I go to the bathroom, if I haven?t tightened up all my deltas and at least left some limits, I can come back and have millions of dollars of exposure.? This stuff is whipping around like crazy.?
There?s thus a huge demand for MicroStrategy?s convertible notes, and that has allowed the firm to sell a ton of them ? five issuances in a year, which is unprecedented. At press time, the company had six outstanding convertible notes, with maturations between 2027 and 2032. Two of these have 0% interest rates, while two others yield 0.625%, a fifth 0.875% and the last one 2.25%. Because these rates are so low, MicroStrategy
?Should implied volatility remain high, I bet MSTR sells more and more convertible bonds? meaning they buy more and more bitcoin,? Greg Magadini, director of derivatives at crypto data firm Amberdata, told CoinDesk. ?To me the first sign of a bitcoin rally ?TOP? will coincide with a drop in MSTR implied volatility.?
Convertible notes mania
In addition to the above-mentioned bitcoin miners, there's medical device company Semler Scientific
Bitcoin miners took on roughly $5.2 billion in debt from June to Dec. 5 alone, according to the MinerMag. Some of these convertible notes have been issued with 0% interest in the case of MARA and Core Scientific
Not every company is employing the strategy for the same reasons, however. MARA and Riot Platforms
Bill eventually comes due
Convertible notes, however, are not free money. As mentioned previously, once the notes reach full maturity, holders can decide to convert them for equity at an agreed-upon price per share, or redeem them for cash if the stock has underperformed expectations.
The danger, then, is that the stock prices of these various firms could drop significantly over a long period of time, incentivizing holders to redeem their notes for cash instead of shares. In MicroStrategy?s case, that could compel the company to sell some of its bitcoin holdings to pay investors back, while bitcoin mining firms could be forced to sell off various mining assets. In a worst case scenario, firms could end up facing bankruptcy.
Forced selling of bitcoin isn't necessarily the end of the world, at least as long as the company?s average purchase price is lower than the price it sells at. MicroStrategy?s stash, for instance, was acquired for $61,725 per bitcoin on average, which gives the firm a certain amount of breathing space. The trouble is bitcoin is well known for plunging 80% every few years. Just this year ? in the middle of a bull market ? the price declined nearly 40% at one point, so there's no guarantee the top cryptocurrency won?t ever sink lower than MicroStrategy?s average purchase price.
Even so, MicroStrategy?s bonds are staggered, meaning that they all have different maturation years. That reduces the company?s risk because it won?t need to repay all of that debt all at once. In other words, bitcoin and MSTR would need to stay down for a significant number of years for the firm?s situation to get really dicey. The fact that most of MicroStrategy?s notes already meet the requirements for conversion is another point in the company?s favor, and it always has the option of rolling over its debt by issuing new convertible bonds, even if they wouldn't be on such favorable terms.
In a sense, MicroStrategy