Strategy’s preferred stock STRC has dropped below $84, well below the $90 it launched at and a full $16 beneath its $100 par value, hitting an all-time low and triggering a chain of consequences that points toward an outcome Saylor has publicly sworn to avoid: selling Bitcoin.
The market is not panicking yet, but it is pricing in doubt, and the mechanics behind that doubt are worth understanding carefully.
Solana Floor flagged the STRC decline as it broke below $85, noting the potential downstream pressure on Strategy’s Bitcoin position. What looks like a preferred stock pricing anomaly on the surface is actually a stress test of the entire financial structure Saylor has constructed.
STRC is a preferred share that Strategy issues, designed to trade at its $100 par value and pay an 11.5% annual dividend. When it trades at par, the system works as intended, Strategy issues new STRC at $100, uses the proceeds to cover dividend obligations, and maintains its Bitcoin accumulation strategy alongside it.
When STRC trades below par, as it is now at $84, the market is sending a direct message: the 11.5% yield is not sufficient compensation for the risk.
Buyers sitting on STRC right now are demanding a 13.7% yield to hold an instrument built to pay 11.5%, and that gap is pure market pricing. Bull Theory’s analysis explains the arithmetic plainly, that 2.2 percentage point spread between what STRC promises and what the market demands is the quantified expression of investor skepticism about Strategy’s ability to sustain its obligations.
The mechanism to close that gap is straightforward in theory: raise the dividend rate to pull buyers back toward par. That worked when STRC was trading near $100. The problem is what raising the dividend actually costs at this scale.
STRC already pays out over $1 billion annually in dividends. That is not a rounding error, it is a structural cash obligation that has to be met regardless of what Bitcoin does on any given day. Strategy has been funding that obligation: by selling new STRC at par, or by selling MSTR common shares at a premium to NAV and using the proceeds to cover the dividend payments.
Both mechanisms depend entirely on market willingness to pay up. Sell new STRC at par, except STRC is no longer trading at par, so that channel is effectively paused. Sell MSTR at a NAV premium, except MSTR’s premium to NAV has compressed close to 1x, meaning there is almost no dilution room left before selling shares becomes value-destructive.
With both primary funding channels constrained simultaneously, Strategy is left with two remaining options: its $1.1 billion cash reserve, and the one move that would rewrite the entire Saylor narrative, selling Bitcoin.
Strategy has not been silent about these concerns. In its latest 8-K filed June 15, the company pushed back directly, arguing that its $55 billion Bitcoin reserve covers $1.7 billion in annual dividends and interest expenses for 32 years. The break-even math requires Bitcoin to appreciate just 3.1% per year, a modest bar for an asset that has historically compounded at multiples of that figure annually.
On paper, the cushion appears substantial. Thirty-two years of coverage at 3.1% annual appreciation is not a position that collapses overnight. The data genuinely supports Saylor’s long-term case, the reserve is real, the math checks out under reasonable assumptions, and Bitcoin only needs to do a fraction of what it has historically done to keep the structure solvent.
The problem is that STRC is still trading at $84. The market is not rejecting Saylor’s math, it is discounting his assumptions about the path between now and 32 years from now. Markets price near-term uncertainty, and right now the near-term picture carries more uncertainty than the 8-K’s long-term projections capture.
There is a specific data point haunting this conversation. The last time Strategy sold Bitcoin, just $2 million worth, Bitcoin’s price dropped 20%. That reaction, disproportionate to the size of the sale itself, reflects how central Strategy’s identity as a buyer has become to Bitcoin’s market psychology.
Strategy has been the single largest institutional Bitcoin buyer in the world. Its purchases have been a consistent demand signal that the market has priced in as structural support. If Strategy transitions from buyer to seller, even under financial necessity rather than conviction, the signaling effect would far outweigh the actual volume sold.
A consistent, forced seller operating from the largest institutional Bitcoin position in existence would represent a fundamental shift in the market’s demand architecture. The 20% drop on a $2 million sale was a preview of what that psychology looks like in motion.
Disclosure: This is not trading or investment advice. Always do your research before buying any cryptocurrency or investing in any services.
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