No they don't.
Speakers are measured in Ohms not Watts. Watts is the amount of power you will be supplying to the speakers. In my 2009 Corolla the speakers can handle at least 400 Watts as this is what my OEM JBL system is pushing.
The power rating of speakers has nothing specific to do with ohms. look at the Watts rating printed somewhere on the speakers
The output power of home theater speakers can vary by a significant amount depending on which speakers are owned. It can range from 30 watts to 150 watts.
im by no means an expert but the answer is yes you just wont get full potential out of the speakers. the amp is pushing 700 watts the speakers are capable of catching 1000 watts.
The ratings for the speakers will depend upon what '300 watts' means. If the amplifier develops 300 watts RMS total across 4 channels, this would indicate 75 watts RMS per channel. Speakers rated at 100 watts should suffice for this amplifier.
Most factory speakers are any any where from 10 - 25 watts RMS. I wouldn't put factory speakers on an amp unless you want to blow them.
Max watts
12 watts
25 to 35 watts
105 watts chann @ 8 ohm speakers
It is unlikely that your speakers will blow if your receiver is rated for 160 watts per channel and your speakers are rated for 130 watts each. The receiver's maximum power output is a measure of its capability, but it does not mean that it will always output that amount of power. As long as you don't push the volume too high or introduce distortion, your speakers should be able to handle the power from the receiver.
Up to 1600 watts amplifier. Less wattage will still power speakers but at a reduced volume level. Wattage is power. If you expect to fill a living room with sound, it would only require about 200-500 watts with good quality speakers. If you want to fill a banquet hall, then you would probably be looking at thousands of watts 2000-10000 watts depending on size of hall.