- Bitcoin fell as much as 3.4% to $62,184 on Thursday — sliding back toward the $60,000 level it breached for the first time since late 2024 just two weeks ago — as Strategy’s STRC preferred stock briefly tumbled below $83, far below its $100 par value, signaling deepening stress in the company’s bitcoin-buying funding machine.
- Strategy shares dropped 3.5% Thursday and are now down roughly 14% since Monday’s close and 70% over the past year; traders are watching STRC as the key barometer of market pressure on the company’s ability to keep accumulating bitcoin without selling it.
- Arca CIO Jeff Dorman said Strategy must either sell “an enormous amount” of bitcoin or common stock to stabilize STRC near par, or risk watching “every part of your cap structure melt” — while FalconX’s Joshua Lim flagged rising rate-hike expectations as a compounding headwind for all risk assets including crypto.
- The STRC preferred was designed as a capital-raising machine — sell shares at $100, buy bitcoin, pay investors a double-digit dividend — but it hasn’t traded at par since the May 15 ex-dividend date, and Strategy already sold bitcoin for the first time since 2022 earlier this month to fund STRC distributions.
What Happened?
Bitcoin extended its retreat toward the $60,000 threshold on Thursday, dropping as much as 3.4% to $62,184 as two converging pressures weighed on the crypto market. First, Strategy’s STRC preferred stock — a key funding mechanism for the company’s bitcoin accumulation — briefly fell below $83, deepening its discount to its $100 par value and effectively making new bitcoin purchases via STRC capital raises unprofitable. Strategy shares slumped another 3.5% on the day, bringing the stock’s week-to-date decline to roughly 14% and its year-over-year loss to 70%. Second, the hawkish signals from new Fed Chair Warsh’s inaugural FOMC meeting — with rate-hike probability for September now above 50% — are weighing broadly on risk assets, including crypto.
Why It Matters?
Strategy holds approximately 846,842 bitcoin — roughly 4% of total supply — and its accumulation strategy has been a significant source of sustained buy pressure on the market. When the STRC funding loop breaks down, that buyer steps back. Worse, if STRC dividend obligations outpace income from common-stock ATM sales, Strategy may be forced to sell more bitcoin — a scenario that rattled markets when it occurred for the first time since 2022 earlier this month. FalconX’s Joshua Lim put it plainly: “The market is likely to test the company’s resolve to continue buying BTC instead of selling a block to shore up cash reserves and extend the STRC dividend runway.” Meanwhile, bitcoin has now lost roughly 50% of its value from its October 2024 record high, with the convergence of rate-hike fears and Strategy-specific stress creating a challenging near-term environment.
What’s Next?
The market is watching two variables: whether Strategy sells additional bitcoin to stabilize its capital structure, and whether the Fed’s next moves tip rate expectations further hawkish. Arca’s Dorman argues Strategy needs a decisive action — either a large BTC sale or a significant common-stock offering — to restore confidence in STRC. The company has a $1.1 billion USD reserve earmarked for preferred dividends, which buys time, but Dorman warns that continued inaction risks a cascading deterioration across Strategy’s entire capital structure. For bitcoin more broadly, a resolution of the Strategy overhang — combined with any softening in Fed hawkishness — could stabilize prices, while a forced large BTC sale would likely accelerate the slide toward $60,000.
Source: Bloomberg












