Market Net Asset Value, better known as mNAV, has become one of the most widely used metrics for evaluating Bitcoin treasury companies. It offers a seemingly straightforward way to compare a firm’s market value against its Bitcoin holdings, making it a favorite among analysts, investors, and companies operating in the “Bitcoin-as-a-treasury-asset” model. But as adoption grows, so does scrutiny — and experts warn that mNAV may oversimplify reality.
What mNAV Is Designed to Measure
mNAV compares a company’s enterprise value (EV) — its market capitalization plus debt minus cash — with the current market value of its Bitcoin holdings. The result is a dimensionless ratio showing whether the market assigns a premium or a discount to the firm’s treasury.
A reading above 1.0 signals that the company trades at a premium, suggesting investor confidence and a perceived strategic advantage. A reading below 1.0 points to a discount, which could indicate skepticism or, for some investors, a potential value opportunity.
The metric has become popular enough that major players publish it openly. Strategy reports its own mNAV series, while BitcoinTreasuries.net tracks values across the sector. As of Nov. 30, Strategy’s reported metrics were:
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mNAV Basic: 0.856
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mNAV Diluted: 0.954
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mNAV EV: 1.105
Taken together, these readings suggest that while equity holders may be paying slightly less than a dollar per dollar of Bitcoin on a diluted basis, the broader market — including debt investors — still values the firm at a premium to its holdings.
The appeal of mNAV lies in its simplicity. It allows analysts to compare companies of different sizes, share structures, or treasury compositions without complicated modeling. It has also become a practical guide for corporate strategy: a firm trading above 1.0 can issue equity or raise debt on favorable terms to buy more Bitcoin, reinforcing the Bitcoin-first business model. When mNAV falls, that strategy becomes harder, costlier, and potentially more dilutive.
Why NYDIG Says mNAV Falls Short
Despite its usefulness, mNAV has drawn criticism from leading market researchers. NYDIG’s global head of research, Greg Cipolaro, argues that the metric is “woefully deficient” in its standard form because it overlooks crucial elements of corporate risk.
A major issue involves convertible notes. According to Cipolaro, many analysts treat these instruments as if they will automatically convert into equity. In reality, conversion depends on market conditions. If price triggers aren’t met, companies may be forced to repay the notes in cash, introducing refinancing risk that mNAV does not capture.
He also highlights mNAV’s tendency to ignore the value — or risk — of the operating company itself. The operating business may generate revenue, incur losses, or hold strategic assets, yet mNAV often treats it as irrelevant. This can produce distorted comparisons between firms with very different business models.
Instead of abandoning the metric, Cipolaro recommends improving it with more robust capital-structure modeling and explicit integration of operating-company value. His critique underscores a broader theme: as Bitcoin treasury firms mature, investors need metrics that reflect more than just coins on a balance sheet.
The Path Forward for Bitcoin Treasury Analysis
Despite its limitations, mNAV remains the most widely cited benchmark for valuing Bitcoin treasury stocks. Its simplicity and comparability ensure it will continue to serve as a baseline metric. However, as more companies adopt Bitcoin-forward treasury strategies — and as their balance sheets grow more complex — investors are demanding greater transparency and standardization.
The real question is no longer simply “What’s the mNAV multiple?” but “What’s actually inside that multiple?”
Understanding the assumptions behind mNAV may become as important as the headline figure itself.
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