Too big to fail: Strategy’s $13 billion bitcoin paper loss alone dwarfs hundreds of prominent tokens

Strategy (MSTR) is sitting on one of the largest unrealized losses in corporate history and it’s bigger than some of crypto’s most prominent projects.
The software-turned-bitcoin-treasury company holds roughly 844,000 $BTC, acquired at an average price near $75,600, according to data source BitcoinTreasuries.net. With $BTC trading near $60,000 as of writing, the mark-to-market hit exceeds $13 billion, which as per fair-value accounting rules, flows straight through the income statement, generating headline-grabbing quarterly losses.
To put that number in perspective: Strategy’s paper loss now surpasses the total market capitalization of dogecoin (around $11.5–12.7 billion), a long running memecoin project and behind Hyperliquid’s $HYPE token, which hovers around $18 billion. $HYPE is the ninth-largest digital asset globally and a top pick for many analysts and funds. They point to substantial upside potential as the decentralized platform has emerged as the preferred marketplace for trading not only cryptocurrencies but also assets tied to traditional finance.
Strategy’s paper loss is also bigger than the market caps of countless other DeFi, privacy, oracle projects such as Monero, Cardano, Chainlink, Bitcoin Cash, Litecoin, BlackRock’s BUIDL, Uniswap, Near Protocol, Aster and others.
That means one company’s leveraged bet on Bitcoin has erased more value – on paper – than several projects real utility.
The sheer scale of this position highlights how far Strategy’s massive $BTC stash has led to a situation that runs counter to crypto’s original promise. Bitcoin and the broader crypto ecosystem were built on ideals of decentralization and democratization that spreads financial power away from large, too-big-to-fail institutions and into the hands of individuals. Instead, one public company has concentrated so much bitcoin that now it creates paper losses rivaling scores of cryptocurrency ecosystems.
Since 2020, Strategy, led by Executive Chairman Michael Saylor, has aggressively raised capital to stack bitcoin, turning the firm into a de facto leveraged play on the asset.
Supporters view the losses as temporary volatility in a long-term “digital gold” thesis, meaning the present paper losses would turn into massive profits once $BTC finds a bottom begins the next bullish cycle.
Nevertheless, the fact that one public company’s unrealized bitcoin loss has grown large enough to dwarf other major tokens is a cautionary tale of concentration of risk and opportunity cost or locking capital in a volatile holding instead of productive business operations or diversified investments.