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Index provider MSCI has reportedly put forward a plan to bar companies with substantial digital asset holdings from its global investable market indexes, potentially compelling affected firms to offload billions in Bitcoin and various other cryptocurrencies in order to maintain eligibility. The rule targets entities where digital assets, such as Bitcoin (BTC), constitute as much as 50% or more of total assets. A final decision is slated for January 15, 2026, with changes possibly taking effect in February of next year.
Analysts project that the exclusion could prompt forced sales of $10 billion to $15 billion in crypto assets across 39 publicly traded companies.
These firms collectively hold a float-adjusted market cap of approximately $113 billion, with Strategy (formerly MicroStrategy) accounting for about 74.5% of the impacted value.
Other notable entities include American Bitcoin Corp, mining operations, and diversified businesses using Bitcoin as a treasury reserve. The preliminary list identifies 18 current index constituents for removal and 21 non-constituents that would be ineligible for future inclusion.
The motivation stems from MSCI’s view that high crypto exposure deviates from standard corporate operations, potentially introducing volatility unsuitable for broad market benchmarks.
If enacted, passive funds tracking MSCI indexes would divest from these stocks, exerting downward pressure on share prices. JPMorgan estimates outflows of up to $2.8 billion for Strategy alone from MSCI-linked funds, escalating to $8.8 billion if competitors like FTSE Russell adopt similar policies.
However, such figures represent a fraction of Strategy’s year-to-date trading volume exceeding $1 trillion.
More critically, in order to evade exclusion, companies might liquidate crypto holdings to dip below the 50% threshold, triggering broader market selloffs and heightened Bitcoin volatility.
This binary cutoff has drawn criticism for its susceptibility to asset price fluctuations, where minor market shifts could cause repeated index churn.
Industry pushback has intensified, with over 1,268 signatures on a petition opposing the move (at the time of writing).
Critics argue it undermines benchmark neutrality by singling out digital assets while overlooking comparable exposures to cash, gold, or intangibles.
For instance, MSCI’s own assets are over 70% illiquid intangibles, contrasting Bitcoin’s liquidity and transparency.
Proponents of corporate Bitcoin adoption, highlighted at events like Bitcoin for Corporations, contend that the proposal stifles innovation in treasury management and ignores Bitcoin’s role as a hedge against inflation.
If other index providers mirror MSCI, the ripple effects could amplify, affecting a wider array of funds and exacerbating liquidity strains in crypto markets.
The consultation period has amplified debates on regulatory treatment of digital assets in traditional finance, with stakeholders urging a rethink to preserve market representativeness.
As the January deadline approaches, the outcome could reshape how firms balance crypto treasuries against index inclusion, potentially curbing the trend of Bitcoin as a corporate reserve asset.
Market participants are monitoring closely, anticipating short-term volatility regardless of the outcome.