MSCI proposal highlights Bitcoin Treasury companies and undercuts benchmark neutrality

Nick Ward

MSCI is considering a new rule that would remove companies from its Global Investable Market Indexes if 50% or more of their assets are contained in digital assets such as Bitcoin. The proposal seems simple, but the consequences are far-reaching. It would affect companies like Michael Saylor’s Strategy (formerly MicroStrategy), Eric and Donald Trump Jr’s American Bitcoin Corp (ABTC) and dozens of others across global markets whose business models are fully legitimate, fully regulated and fully aligned with long-standing corporate practices in the financial sector.

The purpose of this document is to explain what MSCI is proposing, why the concerns raised about Bitcoin finance companies are overstated, and why excluding these firms would undermine benchmark neutrality, reduce representativeness and introduce more instability – not less – into the indexing system.

MSCI launched a consultation to determine whether companies whose primary activity involves Bitcoin or other financial management of digital assets should be excluded from their flagship stock indices if their holdings of digital assets exceed 50% of total assets. The proposed implementation date is February 2026.

The proposal will sweep into a wide range of companies:

  • Strategy (formerly MicroStrategy), a large software and business-intelligence company that holds Bitcoin as a treasury reserve.
  • American Bitcoin Corp (ABTC), a new public company created by Eric and Donald Trump with a Bitcoin-focused balance sheet.
  • Miners, infrastructure companies and diversified operating companies using Bitcoin as a long-term inflation hedge or capital reserve.

These companies are all listed operating units with audited financials, real products, real customers and established management. None are “Bitcoin ETFs.” Their only difference is a financial strategy that includes a liquid, globally traded asset.

JPMorgan analysts recently warned that Strategy could face up to $2.8bn. in passive outflows if MSCI removes it from its indexes, and up to $8.8 billion if other index providers follow suit.

Their analysis correctly identifies the mechanical nature of passive flows. But it misses the real context.

Strategy has acted more than $1 trillion in volume this year.
The “catastrophic” $2.8B scenario represents:

  • Less than one average trading day
  • ~12% of a typical week
  • ~3% of a typical month
  • 0.26% of year-to-date trade flow

In terms of liquidity, this is immaterial. The narrative of a liquidity crisis does not match the reality of the market structure. The biggest problem isn’t the outflow itself – it’s the precedent that index exclusion would set.

If benchmark providers start removing companies due to the composition of their own assets, the definition of what qualifies as an “eligible company” becomes non-neutral.