- Strategy Inc.’s preferred stock STRC, pitched as its “iPhone moment” for retail investors seeking safe Bitcoin exposure, has collapsed from its $100 issue price to roughly $75, wiping out early buyers and undermining the company’s key funding vehicle.
- Strategy’s financing flywheel — issuing securities to buy more Bitcoin, which drives up Bitcoin’s price, enabling more securities to be issued — is at risk as Bitcoin has fallen firmly below $60,000 and the company sold Bitcoin for the first time since 2022.
- Spot Bitcoin ETFs have seen nearly $3 billion in net outflows in June alone, retail participation has faded, and many ETF investors who bought near launch remain underwater.
- Experts warn that if Strategy can no longer issue preferred stock at reasonable prices, it loses one of Bitcoin’s largest and most consistent corporate buyers — a systemic risk for the entire crypto market.
What Happened?
Strategy Inc.’s preferred shares, known as STRC, have fallen from their $100 issue price to approximately $75, eroding confidence in one of the firm’s central funding mechanisms. Saylor had marketed STRC as a mass-market security offering high monthly yield with less volatility than Strategy’s common equity — calling it the company’s “iPhone moment.” Retail investors purchased roughly 80% of the shares. As Bitcoin has declined below $60,000 and Strategy disclosed the sale of 32 Bitcoin in June — its first since 2022 — markets have begun questioning whether the company’s Bitcoin accumulation flywheel can keep turning. Spot Bitcoin ETFs have recorded nearly $3 billion in net outflows this month.
Why It Matters?
Strategy’s model was elegant when Bitcoin was rising: sell equity and preferred stock, buy Bitcoin, watch the holdings appreciate, repeat. STRC was supposed to make that loop accessible to ordinary investors seeking income. But as Bitcoin struggles and STRC loses value, the cost of capital for that flywheel rises sharply. Strategy’s B- credit rating already reflects its speculative nature. If it can no longer raise cheap capital, one of Bitcoin’s largest and most consistent sources of demand disappears — and the broader crypto market has no obvious replacement buyer at scale.
What’s Next?
Markets will watch whether Strategy can stabilize STRC pricing and whether Saylor resumes Bitcoin purchases or continues selling. A prolonged STRC discount would signal that the market no longer trusts the funding model at any price. For the broader crypto space, the unwinding of Strategy’s flywheel raises an unsettling question: whether the financial engineering that made Bitcoin appear institutional-grade merely repackaged risk rather than reduced it.
Source: Bloomberg











