Michael Saylor built Strategy into the world’s largest corporate Bitcoin holder by engineering one of the most sophisticated capital structures in public markets. The company now holds 846,842 BTC, worth approximately $54 billion at current prices. Around that core position, Saylor constructed an interlocking system of common stock (MSTR), three series of preferred stock (STRK, STRD, STRF), and the flagship Digital Credit instrument that has dominated market discussion all week: STRC.
STRC is a variable-rate perpetual preferred stock with a $100 stated par value. It pays dividends that flex with market conditions, currently set at 11.25% annualised. The structure scaled to $8.5 billion in just nine months, becoming the largest preferred stock by market capitalisation in the world. The dividend mechanism was designed specifically to keep STRC trading near its $100 par value even when Bitcoin’s price fluctuated.
The design is now under stress.
STRC closed at $88.59 for the second consecutive day below $90, more than 11% below the stated par value. The discount represents a meaningful breakdown in the dividend stabilisation mechanism that has supported the entire Digital Credit thesis. Analysts at CoinGape estimate Strategy could be forced to sell up to $4 billion in Bitcoin and MSTR common stock to restore STRC to its $100 par value.
Saylor publicly defended Strategy’s position on Saturday, stating that the company’s combined Bitcoin and USD reserves exceed total debt obligations. The defence acknowledges the pressure without admitting the structural problem. For Bitcoin markets that have been bleeding throughout the week amid Iran developments and Fed hawkishness, the prospect of the largest corporate holder being forced to sell adds another layer of potential overhead supply that the recovery thesis can’t afford.
How STRC Actually Works
Understanding the current pressure requires understanding what STRC was designed to do.
The instrument launched in 2025 as Strategy’s flagship Digital Credit product. Each share has a $100 stated par value and a variable dividend that adjusts based on market conditions. The variable dividend mechanism is the key innovation. When STRC trades below par, the dividend rate increases to attract buyers and restore price stability. When it trades above par, the dividend rate decreases.
The current 11.25% annual dividend rate was set specifically to defend the $100 par value. STRC pays dividends monthly, with Saylor recently proposing to shareholders that the dividend frequency double to semi-monthly to further enhance price stability. The mechanism works through making STRC progressively more attractive as the price falls, theoretically creating buying pressure that returns the instrument to par.
The structure has been remarkably successful through most of 2025 and early 2026. STRC scaled from launch to $8.5 billion in market capitalisation within nine months. The 30-day historical volatility ran at just 1.7%, comparable to investment-grade fixed-income securities rather than crypto-adjacent instruments. The 2.53 Sharpe ratio matched or exceeded the best fixed-income products globally.
Institutional adoption followed the operational success. Corporate treasuries including Prevalon, Strive, and Anchorage accumulated $150 million in STRC. DeFi protocols including Apyx and Saturn held over $270 million across protocol-level integrations. The structure positioned STRC as one of the most interesting capital allocation innovations in public markets in years.
The current breakdown matters because it tests whether the dividend stabilisation mechanism actually works under stress. If STRC can return to par through normal market dynamics, the structure remains valid. If it can’t, Strategy may need to deploy capital from Bitcoin sales or MSTR offerings to support the price, which is exactly the scenario the structure was designed to avoid.
What the $4 Billion Number Represents
The CoinGape analysis suggesting up to $4 billion in Bitcoin and MSTR stock sales reflects specific calculations about what would be required to restore STRC to par.
STRC has approximately $8.5 billion in market capitalisation. The roughly 11% discount from par implies about $935 million in value gap that needs to be closed through some combination of price recovery, buyback activity, or other support mechanisms. The $4 billion figure includes both the direct buyback capital required and the additional buffer that Strategy might need to deploy to demonstrate sufficient backing to restore confidence in the dividend stabilisation mechanism.
The mechanics of how Strategy could deploy capital matter for the Bitcoin market. The company has several options.
Direct buyback of STRC shares at current discounted prices would be the most efficient approach. Strategy could purchase STRC shares trading at $88.59, retire them, and reduce the float that needs to be supported. This requires immediate cash deployment that the company doesn’t currently have in liquid form. The $2.25 billion USD Reserve provides some operational cushion but isn’t designed for major STRC buyback programs.
Bitcoin sales to fund STRC support represents the scenario that crypto markets fear most. Strategy holds 846,842 BTC. Selling even 50,000 BTC at current prices would generate approximately $3.1 billion at current $62,000 levels. The selling pressure from the largest corporate holder would create significant downward pressure on Bitcoin during exactly the period when the broader market is trying to establish a sustainable recovery.
MSTR common stock sales through the existing ATM (at-the-market) program represents another funding mechanism. Strategy has substantial unused capacity in the ATM facility. MSTR sales would dilute existing common stock holders but wouldn’t directly affect Bitcoin holdings. The trade-off is between protecting STRC investors and protecting MSTR investors.
Some combination of all three approaches is the most likely actual response if Strategy decides to defend STRC aggressively. The exact composition depends on management’s assessment of which capital sources can be deployed with least overall damage.
The May 31 Sale That Started the Concerns
The current STRC pressure builds on concerns that began with Strategy’s first Bitcoin sale of the cycle in late May.
Between May 26 and May 31, Strategy sold 32 BTC for approximately $2.5 million at an average price of $77,135. The transaction was tiny in absolute terms and was characterised by Saylor as a “test” rather than a meaningful capital allocation event. The proceeds were used to fund distributions on preferred stock, including STRC dividends.
But the symbolism was substantial. Strategy had publicly committed for years to “never be a net seller” of Bitcoin. Saylor had explicitly stated multiple times that selling Bitcoin contradicted the entire Strategy thesis. The 32 BTC sale broke that explicit framing, even at small scale.
Markets immediately questioned whether the test sale represented a precedent rather than an anomaly. If Strategy was willing to sell 32 BTC to fund preferred stock dividends, what amount would they sell if STRC came under serious pressure? The June 18-19 STRC decline to $88.59 transformed that question from hypothetical to immediate.
Strategy continued buying Bitcoin through the volatility, adding 1,587 BTC for $100 million between June 8-14, lifting holdings to 846,842 BTC. The continued accumulation provides some reassurance that strategic Bitcoin purchasing remains the priority. But the precedent of selling Bitcoin to fund preferred stock obligations now exists, and markets have to weight that precedent against the buying activity.
The Defence Saylor Just Issued
Michael Saylor’s Saturday statement attempted to address market concerns directly.
The core argument: Strategy’s combined Bitcoin holdings (worth approximately $54 billion at current prices) and USD reserves ($2.25 billion designated for dividend coverage) substantially exceed the company’s total debt obligations. By this measure, Strategy remains solvent and doesn’t face existential pressure. The capital structure can absorb significant adverse conditions before requiring forced asset sales.
The mathematical case is genuine. Strategy’s total debt obligations sit at approximately $8 billion across various convertible notes and other instruments. The Bitcoin holdings plus USD reserves total approximately $56 billion. The 7x coverage ratio is comfortable by any traditional credit analysis standard.
The complication is that solvency at current Bitcoin prices doesn’t address the immediate STRC pressure. STRC investors aren’t worried about Strategy defaulting. They’re worried about whether the dividend stabilisation mechanism actually keeps the price near par. The breakdown to $88.59 raises that specific question regardless of how comfortable Strategy’s overall solvency position is.
The defence works at the macro level but doesn’t address the immediate technical question that’s driving STRC pressure. Whether markets accept the defence depends on whether STRC can recover toward par through normal market dynamics over the coming sessions. If it doesn’t, the question of forced selling will return regardless of Saylor’s statements.
What This Means for Bitcoin
The STRC situation creates a specific overhang on Bitcoin’s price recovery that wasn’t there a week ago.
For Bitcoin bulls, the worst-case scenario involves Strategy being forced to sell substantial Bitcoin holdings into a thin market. Even if the total selling is “only” $1-2 billion (much less than the $4 billion analyst estimate), the impact on a market that’s already absorbing FOMC hawkishness, Iran-related uncertainty, and ETF outflows would be significant. The largest corporate holder selling actively contradicts the institutional accumulation narrative that has supported the recent recovery.
For Bitcoin bears, the STRC situation provides exactly the kind of structural pressure that confirms bearish positioning. Concerns about leveraged Bitcoin treasury companies have been part of the bear case throughout 2026. The current pressure validates those concerns and creates conditions where additional bearish positioning may produce continued downside.
The actual path forward depends on several factors. STRC’s price recovery toward par would resolve the immediate concern. Bitcoin price recovery toward $70,000+ would reduce the overall pressure on Strategy’s capital structure even if STRC remained below par. Successful capital raises through MSTR sales could provide the resources to defend STRC without requiring Bitcoin sales. New institutional buying of STRC at current discounted prices could absorb supply and support the price.
The most likely outcome is some combination of partial Bitcoin selling, MSTR ATM activity, and gradual STRC recovery as the dividend mechanism eventually attracts sufficient buyers at the elevated 11.25% yield. But this scenario plays out over weeks rather than days, and the uncertainty in the interim weighs on broader Bitcoin sentiment.
For investors evaluating Bitcoin exposure at current $62,000 levels, the STRC situation represents an additional risk that wasn’t priced into the recovery thesis a week ago. Whether the pressure resolves favourably or extends into broader Bitcoin selling will be revealed over the coming sessions.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Cryptocurrency investments carry significant risk. Always conduct your own research before making any investment decisions.


















