
Bitwise CIO: Strategy Won't Sell BTC — and the Bear Market Is Closer to a Bottom Than People Think
One of July's biggest market fears is building: what happens to Bitcoin if Strategy — the largest corporate holder with over 500,000 BTC — is forced to sell? JPMorgan estimated potential forced sales at $2.8 billion amid risks of MSCI index exclusion. In June, market rumors that Strategy was already selling became one of the triggers for BTC's collapse to $57,950, CryptoBriefing reports.
Hougan (Bitwise): 'No mechanism for forced selling'
Matt Hougan, CIO of Bitwise Asset Management — which manages $4B+ in crypto ETFs — has publicly rebutted this narrative. According to him, there is no plausible near-term mechanism that would force Strategy to part with its bitcoin, Bitbo reports.
Hougan's three concrete arguments:
1. Reserves. Strategy holds $1.44 billion in cash — enough to cover debt obligations and dividends for at least one year without selling a single BTC.
2. Debt structure. Annual obligations total roughly $800 million, but all key repayments are deferred until 2027. There is no near-term pressure.
3. Saylor's control. Michael Saylor controls 42% of Strategy's voting shares. His conviction in Bitcoin's long-term value is among the strongest of any public company executive. A corporate reversal is impossible without his consent.
"You'd be hard pressed to find a human being with more conviction on bitcoin's long-term value than Saylor" — Matt Hougan, CIO of Bitwise.
MSCI risk: scary, but not fatal
Hougan does not dismiss the MSCI exclusion risk — he actually puts its probability at around 75%. But he points to history: index inclusions and exclusions have far less market impact than is commonly assumed. Short-term pressure is possible, but not catastrophic. The 'forced selling' thesis, in his view, is a media-amplified panic with no real financial substance in the near term.
'Rounding bottom' and the path to $100,000
Hougan describes the current cycle not as a classic crash but as a 'rounding bottom' — a slow accumulation pattern before a reversal. Standard Chartered analysts called a bottom near $59,000, representing a 53% decline from October 2025's peak at $126,000. Bitwise's year-end 2026 target is $100,000 — roughly 70% from current levels. Hougan sees three metrics pointing toward a reversal: sustained ETF inflows, growing corporate BTC treasury adoption, and recovering on-chain activity indicators, MEXC reports.
On-chain data shows that large whales — wallets with 1,000+ BTC — are continuing to buy on every dip, holding a HODL strategy that has historically preceded the start of a new bull cycle.
Takeaway
Hougan's thesis is straightforward: the Strategy fears are a media narrative, not a real financial risk on any 12-month horizon. While the market sells in panic, Bitwise maintains a constructive view and expects a reversal in the second half of 2026.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.

Author
Mike Robinson
News feed editor
I'm constantly writing about crypto, Bitcoin, and altcoins. I cover a variety of topics related to the virtual currency market.
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