Could MicroStrategy Be Your Ticket to Becoming a Millionaire by 2050?

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For many years, MicroStrategy (NASDAQ: MSTR) was a sleepy tech stock. Between 2010 and 2020, the data mining and analytics software provider only grew its annual revenues at a compound annual rate of 0.6%, and it struggled to stay relevant against nimbler cloud-based competitors like Salesforce.

But in 2020, MicroStrategy’s co-founder and then-CEO Michael Saylor directed it to invest $250 million in Bitcoin (CRYPTO: BTC). It has continued to buy Bitcoin over the following years, and its total holdings reached 279,420 Bitcoins this November.

Image source: Getty Images.

In total, MicroStrategy laid out about $11.9 billion for those Bitcoins, which are worth $28.3 billion as of this writing. That sum accounts for over 30% of MicroStrategy’s current market cap. It also makes the company the world’s largest single corporate holder of Bitcoin.

Over the past five years, MicroStrategy’s stock price surged by 2,590% as the soaring value of its Bitcoin investments offset the anemic growth of its software business. That rally would have turned a $40,000 investment into more than $1 million. But could MicroStrategy’s stock deliver even bigger gains by 2050?

MicroStrategy has been trying to revive its software business by replacing its on-site desktop applications with cloud-based subscription services. It has also been rolling out new generative AI tools for crunching large amounts of data.

However, its total revenue still declined by 1% in 2023, and analysts expect its total revenue to grow at a compound annual rate of less than 1% from 2023 to 2026. In other words, the software side of the business is expected to stay sluggish for the foreseeable future — but that mainly serves as a source of fresh cash for it to spend on more Bitcoin.

The company has also been taking on a lot of debt, issuing more shares, and racking up high impairment charges related to its Bitcoin purchases. It ended its latest quarter with $4.2 billion in long-term debt — up from $2.1 billion at the end of 2021 — and it has increased its number of outstanding shares by 122% over the past five years. Analysts expect the impairment charges from its Bitcoin purchases will keep MicroStrategy unprofitable on a generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP) basis through 2026.

Bitcoin bulls believe MicroStrategy’s all-in bet on the crypto will pay off as the cryptocurrency’s value skyrockets over the next few decades. Saylor has predicted that Bitcoin’s price could rise from about $100,000 today to $13 million over the next 21 years as it gains more traction with institutional investors and financial institutions, while investment management firm VanEck’s most-bullish analyst prediction is that its price could rise as high as $52 million by 2050. VanEck, it should be noted, has among its offerings the VanEck Bitcoin ETF, one of the many funds that invest solely in that asset.

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