Michael Saylor’s Strategy has calmed the immediate panic around its preferred-stock complex, but the company’s latest overhaul points to a more complicated phase for one of Bitcoin’s most visible corporate buyers.
Strategy, formerly known as MicroStrategy, announced a new capital-management framework this week after STRC, its flagship preferred stock, fell to a low of $71.25 on June 26.
The preferred security was designed to trade near its $100 stated amount, making the selloff a sharp test of investor confidence in the company’s financing model.
The pressure forced a familiar question back into the market: whether Strategy could keep funding a growing dividend bill without selling Bitcoin, issuing more common stock, or damaging confidence in the securities it has used to finance its Bitcoin accumulation.
The company responded with a broad package. It raised STRC’s annual dividend rate to 12% from 11.5%, adopted a board-approved dollar reserve policy, authorized up to $1 billion in repurchases of its preferred securities, approved another $1 billion common-stock buyback, and introduced a Bitcoin monetization program which would allow the firm to sell some of its BTC holdings.
The market reaction suggests the package worked, at least for now. MSTR stock has gained 18% this week to trade near $100, while STRC has climbed 17% during the same period to about $87.
Yet the rebound also signaled a shift in Strategy’s role. The company that became famous for repeatedly raising capital to buy Bitcoin is now using a wider set of tools to defend both sides of its balance sheet.
Strategy’s rebound came with a cost
Strategy’s rescue package gave investors enough reassurance to halt the immediate selloff, but market analysts said the company had pushed its capital-structure problem further into the future rather than eliminated it.
In a July 3 note shared with investors, Alex Thorn, Galaxy Digital’s head of research, called the overhaul a smart move that gave Strategy more room to maneuver during a period of weak Bitcoin prices and stressed preferred securities.
According to him, the new framework gives the company more tools to support its capital stack before the market starts pricing in forced Bitcoin sales or deeper common-stock dilution.
Still, Thorn said the structure remains exposed to the same underlying pressures. Strategy has a large preferred-stock base, recurring dividend obligations and about $6.7 billion of outstanding convertible debt due in 2027 and 2028.
He also pointed out that the Saylor-led company’s model still depends on Bitcoin holding enough value to support the balance sheet, MSTR remaining financeable, and preferred investors believing the company can keep paying them.
If one of those markets weakens, the strain can quickly spread through the rest of the capital stack. Nonetheless, he concluded that “Strategy’s move Monday simply kicks the can down the road. But Strategy kicked the can pretty far.”
Jeff Dorman, chief investment officer of Arca, reached a similar conclusion, describing the overhaul as a temporary fix that may delay the debate for a year or two.
However, he noted that the pressure could return because no solution fully satisfies common shareholders, preferred holders, and Bitcoin bulls unless the top crypto rallies sharply.
Wall Street may take the lead from Saylor
Meanwhile, the same flexibility that helped Strategy push out its capital-structure risk may also reduce its importance as Bitcoin’s dominant marginal buyer.
Bitwise Chief Investment Officer Matt Hougan said he does not expect Strategy to become a large seller of Bitcoin, even after the company introduced a program that allows it to monetize part of its holdings.
He said:
I don’t think [Strategy] will be a large seller. There’s no mechanism that will force Strategy to sell more than a few billion dollars of bitcoin a year. And if bitcoin’s price rallies, I think it’s likely it will be a net buyer.
Still, Hougan said Strategy is likely to be a less important force in Bitcoin’s next cycle than it was in the last one.
According to him, the STRC selloff exposed the limits of Strategy’s model of repeatedly raising capital to buy Bitcoin.
He compared the stress to the unwinding of the Grayscale Bitcoin Trust premium, another cycle-era structure that helped channel capital into Bitcoin during stronger markets before becoming a source of pressure when confidence faded.
Hougan said the problem was that money seeking high yields and low volatility had been routed into Bitcoin, an asset that offers neither. That capital, he wrote, “never really fit bitcoin” and may need to be cleared out before the market can find a bottom.
In view of this, Hougan argued that the next phase of Bitcoin demand is more likely to come from a broader institutional base, including banks, asset managers, pensions, endowments, sovereign wealth funds and financial advisers.
He pointed to signs that those buyers are already moving further into the market, noting that:
Morgan Stanley recently launched proprietary bitcoin ETFs, Wells Fargo is putting bitcoin into model portfolios, and so on. Last year, Texas became the first U.S. state to fund a strategic bitcoin reserve. Multiple sovereign wealth funds and sovereign banks either already hold bitcoin or have announced study programs.
This would mark a significant evolution in Bitcoin’s buyer base and show that the next market cycle may depend more on slower-moving institutional capital rather than a single public company with an aggressive balance-sheet strategy.
Strategy’s next role depends on preserving its Bitcoin upside
If institutions take a larger role in Bitcoin’s next demand cycle, Strategy’s next test will be whether it can remain attractive as a leveraged Bitcoin vehicle while using more defensive tools to manage its capital stack.
The company is still one of the largest public holders of Bitcoin, but its model is becoming more complex. Investors are no longer just weighing the value of its BTC holdings.
They are also assessing whether Strategy can meet preferred dividends, manage convertible debt, maintain access to equity markets, and use its Bitcoin stack without weakening the upside that made MSTR attractive.
That makes the debate over Bitcoin income more important. Galaxy Digital said Strategy should consider ways to generate cash from its holdings without relying heavily on spot Bitcoin sales.
That could include lending a small, segregated portion of its BTC under conservative terms or using options strategies to harvest volatility while preserving most of the asset’s upside.
Those approaches could give Strategy a middle path between common-stock dilution and outright Bitcoin sales. A modest income program could help fund recurring obligations, support confidence in the preferred securities, and reduce the risk that temporary market stress turns into a broader capital-structure crisis.
However, the trade-off is clear. Bitcoin lending introduces counterparty, custody and duration risk, while options strategies can cap gains if they are used too aggressively.
For MSTR holders, the appeal has long been exposure to Bitcoin with additional upside from Strategy’s capital markets machine. Any program that dulls that convexity could make the stock less compelling.
Notably, Strategy has already considered parts of that path. CryptoSlate previously reported that CEO Phong Le said the company had held talks with banks about lending out its Bitcoin holdings, though he said Strategy was waiting for major financial institutions to enter the space before making a decision.
That wait may be ending as banks, advisers and sovereign-linked investors move deeper into Bitcoin. Their arrival could give Strategy more counterparties and more ways to earn income from its stack, but it could also reduce the company’s importance as the market’s defining corporate buyer.
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