- Strategy Inc. raised approximately $467 million through the sale of common stock, lifting its cash reserve to roughly $3 billion; a Monday SEC filing revealed the company made no Bitcoin purchases or sales during the seven days ended July 12, instead replenishing its liquidity buffer entirely through equity issuance — confirming that common stock remains Strategy’s primary funding mechanism even as founder Michael Saylor has broadened the company’s capital-raising toolkit to include Bitcoin sales.
- The filing comes one week after Strategy’s $216 million Bitcoin sale — its first significant Bitcoin disposal — which the company characterized as a tactical capital management move under its new financing framework; Monday’s no-purchase-no-sale disclosure may reassure investors that the Bitcoin sale was tactical rather than the beginning of regular disposals, though questions remain about how Strategy will fund future Bitcoin purchases without further equity dilution or additional Bitcoin sales.
- Strategy’s preferred shares continue to trade below levels that make new issuance economically attractive — a constraint that has forced the company back to common equity as its primary funding source and limits one of the principal channels Saylor had hoped would reduce dilution to common shareholders; the preferred share price weakness reflects both Bitcoin’s 47% decline over the past year and broader skepticism about Strategy’s leveraged Bitcoin accumulation model in a market where the original thesis (Bitcoin as corporate treasury asset) has produced an 80% stock decline over 12 months.
- The market context is severe: Strategy shares fell 2.7% to $92.10 Monday while Bitcoin dropped approximately 3% to $62,200; the stock is down nearly 80% over the past year while Bitcoin has declined 47% in the same period — Strategy’s leverage amplifying Bitcoin’s decline through the equity structure; JPMorgan has separately warned that Saylor’s Strategy model adds new risk to the Bitcoin market, given that a forced unwind of Strategy’s Bitcoin position would represent a large single-seller event in an already-weakened market.
What Happened?
Strategy Inc. disclosed in a Monday SEC filing that it raised ~$467 million through common stock sales over the past week, bringing its cash reserve to ~$3 billion. The company made no Bitcoin purchases or sales during the seven days ended July 12. The filing follows last week’s $216 million Bitcoin sale — Strategy’s first major Bitcoin disposal under its new capital management framework — and comes as the company’s preferred shares trade below levels that make new issuance viable. Strategy stock fell 2.7% to $92.10 Monday; Bitcoin dropped ~3% to $62,200.
Why It Matters?
Strategy’s evolution from a pure Bitcoin accumulator to a company that sells Bitcoin, issues equity, and manages a $3 billion cash reserve represents a significant shift in the market’s largest corporate Bitcoin holder. For years, Strategy’s predictable buying behavior made it one of the most price-insensitive Bitcoin buyers in the market — a structural support for Bitcoin prices. The new framework introduces selling as a tool, making Strategy’s market impact unpredictable in both directions. JPMorgan’s warning about Strategy adding risk to the Bitcoin market reflects this shift: a company that can sell Bitcoin becomes a potential source of supply-side pressure, not just demand-side support, in an already weakened crypto market.
What’s Next?
Watch for whether Strategy resumes Bitcoin purchases in the coming weeks — if the $3 billion cash reserve is deployed into Bitcoin, it would be the clearest signal that last week’s sale was truly tactical. If the cash reserve continues to grow without Bitcoin purchases, the market will interpret that as a more fundamental shift in Saylor’s strategy. The preferred share price is the key indicator of Strategy’s ability to access non-dilutive capital: a recovery toward par would unlock the preferred issuance channel and reduce pressure on common equity. CoinDesk research separately notes that Bitcoin is approaching a Fidelity-tracked power law support line that has historically marked cycle lows.
Source: Bloomberg











