Currently, MSTR holds 650,000 Bitcoins with a fair value of $55.6 billion, yet its total market cap is only $49 billion, implying a $6.6 billion (11.9%) discount—far exceeding the so-called “$1 billion”. This is the first time since Saylor launched the Bitcoin treasury strategy in 2020 that there has been a sustained and significant NAV discount. The mNAV ratio has dropped to 0.88, just one step away from the MSCI index exclusion threshold. If exclusion occurs, passive funds will dump about $2.8 billion of stock, officially triggering a death spiral. In November, $1.44 billion in preferred shares were issued to fill the interest gap, further diluting equity. The bitter fruit of high beta is finally being tasted as Bitcoin dropped from $108,000 to $85,500. Some still insist, “Even if Bitcoin drops to $1, I won’t sell.” But the market votes with its feet: the stock is down 41% YTD, while Bitcoin is only down 7.2%. Short-term support at $140, resistance at $180; in the long term, only if Bitcoin returns above $100,000 can the premium myth restart.
10-year JGB yield is at 1.88%, 30-year at 3.20%, both posting the fastest monthly gains since 2008. BOJ Governor’s speech on December 1 was interpreted as “a December rate hike is certain,” with the market pricing in an 82% probability. The yen surged, USD/JPY briefly broke below 145. This is the result of a 260% debt/GDP ratio + election-driven fiscal expansion + Trump tariff threats. In the past week, yen and Bitcoin have shown a rare positive correlation (correlation coefficient 0.85), essentially because the world’s largest carry trade currency is appreciating, forcing arbitrage positions to unwind and siphoning off liquidity. Whenever similar scenarios occur, Bitcoin almost simultaneously drops by 1.2%.
On November 30, a single-day injection of $2.94 billion marked the second largest daily amount since 2020. SOFR spiked to 5.38%, and the reserve ratio is near the 8.7% red line last seen during the September 2019 repo crisis. Although QT officially ended on December 1, banks’ proactive borrowing shows cracks have appeared in funding conditions. On the surface, “all is well,” but beneath it, holes are being patched.
Institutional bond holdings have dropped to 15%, matching levels seen before the dot-com bubble and subprime crisis. The bid-to-cover ratio for 20- and 30-year US Treasuries fell below 2.3x in November, amplifying tail risk. If no one is buying bonds, the next flight-to-safety reversal will see yields gap up violently—that will be the starting point of a systemic event.
On November 28, net inflow was $240 million in a single day; another $110 million flowed in on December 1. The largest IBIT options put wall is at $47 (corresponding to Bitcoin $83,000); breach of $43 targets $75,000. Holding above $87,500 and the daily 20MA allows for liquidity sweep, targeting $98,000–$102,000. Classic script: retail panics, institutions go all-in.
December will likely see choppy consolidation in the first week to digest post-Thanksgiving exuberance, with a year-end rally in the two weeks before Christmas. S&P 500 will likely touch the 6,850–7,000 range, and Bitcoin will likely retrace to near $100,000. But 2026 is the real test: Japan rate hikes, Fed possibly restarting QT, US fiscal deficit spinning out of control, and Trump implementing tariffs—all these landmines will eventually blow.
The market in December 2025 is neither the end of a bull market nor the start of a bear market, but rather “the illusion of liquidity in the last stage of the bull market is gradually being stripped away.” All glaring signals—MSTR discount, yen appreciation, Fed repo, US Treasury auction tail risk, zero bond allocation—point to one fact: the global financial system is warming up for even greater volatility in 2026.
Related Articles
Base58 Labs’ BASIS 2026 Blueprint Forges a New Standard for BTC, ETH, SOL & PAXG
Naoris Launches Post-Quantum Blockchain as Bitcoin, Ethereum Devs Scramble to Face Threat
Bitcoin Cash Suddenly Dumps 5% as Whale Reportedly Dumps 60,000 BCH
From Bitcoin Miners to Payment Layers: Why Infrastructure Conversations Are Turning to Bitcoin Everlight