I think you typoed there. This would only be the case if the Blu-ray player was straight bitstreaming the whole DTS-HD audio codec to the receiver. The Blu-ray player would not be doing any decoding in regards to audio at all (which I would never do). It's better over all to have the Blu-ray decode the DTS-HD, Dolby Digital TrueHD, or Dolby Digital Plus audio codec internally and convert it to LPCM for output over HDMI. This ensures you get all the secondary audio that should be included (menu sounds, commentary) with no loss of fidelity (these conversion processes have to happen somewhere and the player is the best place to have it done).
The only thing that will be different is the receiver will not display the cute little DTS-HD logo because it's getting the uncompressed PCM. Dolby Digital TrueHD, Plus, and DTS-HD decoding on receivers is more or less a frivolous feature at this point in my opinion, as it offers no advantage. It's actually more detrimental than helpful to have the receiver handle all the decoding.