MicroStrategy (MSTR -10.99%) stock saw big sell-offs in Tuesday's trading. As of 3:15 p.m.
Shares of MicroStrategy (MSTR) rose Monday as one of the largest corporate holders of bitcoin (BTCUSD) added to its stockpile, with plans to raise more capital for future purchases.
MicroStrategy (NASDAQ:MSTR) seeks to buy another $2 billion worth of Bitcoin (CRYPTO:BTC) ahead of a shareholder vote on massively increasing the number of company shares outstanding.
Single stock ETFs, like MSTX, offer high returns but come with significant volatility, making them suitable for short-term traders rather than long-term investors. MSTX provides 2x leveraged exposure to MicroStrategy, amplifying both potential gains and losses, with a 1.29% expense ratio. MSTX and MSTU are similar, but MSTU's lower expense ratio and earlier 2x leverage have attracted more assets.
The move is part of the company's plan to issue $21 billion of equity and $21 billion in fixed-income instruments over the next three years.
The business software company is the world's largest corporate holder of Bitcoin.
The stock market is a popularity contest in the short term but a weighing machine in the long term. At least, that's what Warren Buffett and Benjamin Graham, the fathers of value investing, think today.
MicroStrategy (MSTR 3.59%) and KULR Technology (KULR -14.37%) both recently generated a lot of buzz with their big investments in Bitcoin (BTC -0.25%). Microstrategy, which started buying Bitcoin in 2020, had accumulated 279,420 Bitcoins as of Nov. 10.
On November 20th, we congratulated MicroStrategy, Inc. MSTR shareholders for their recent gains and suggested it was time to hedge. In the same X post, we included a TikTok video showing an optimal collar hedge for the stock.
Bitcoin-buying machine MicroStrategy (NASDAQ:MSTR) is having a tough end to the year.
Though tedious, a post-analysis is a worthwhile endeavor for investors of all levels.
In case you haven't noticed, the bulls have been running wild on Wall Street for two years. As of the closing bell on Dec. 30, the ageless Dow Jones Industrial Average, broad-based S&P 500, and growth-centric Nasdaq Composite had respectively rallied by 13%, 24%, and 30% for 2024.