Strategy Digital Credit: Reshaping Corporate Bitcoin Finance

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Strategy Inc has launched a Digital Credit Capital Framework to manage its massive Bitcoin reserves, combining $2.55 billion in cash with capital recycling mechanisms to support its long-term investment thesis.

🔑 Key Takeaways

  • Framework establishes $2.55 billion in cash reserves, covering 17 months of preferred dividends.
  • Authorizes up to $1.25 billion in Bitcoin monetization.
  • STRC dividend rate raised to 12% with monthly adjustments.
  • Public debates on strategy sustainability from Grayscale and CryptoQuant.

Strategy’s Digital Credit Framework

When Strategy began accumulating Bitcoin in August 2020, the thesis was straightforward: use software revenue to acquire the hardest digital asset and let time work. This Digital Asset Treasury (DAT) model served well through the 2021-2024 bull cycles. But with 847,363 BTC on the balance sheet as of June 2026, representing about 4.2% of Bitcoin’s circulating supply and a total cost basis of $64.1 billion, the company grew too large for binary simplicity.

The Digital Credit Capital Framework introduces what Saylor calls a real estate developer analogy: buy with credit, let appreciate, sell selectively to fund obligations, and recycle proceeds into new instruments. It is not exit liquidity but active capital recycling to compound Bitcoin per share over the long run.

The USD Reserve of $2.55 billion alone covers about 17 months of preferred dividends. Combined with the authorized Bitcoin monetization capacity of $1.25 billion, total coverage expands to $3.8 billion and roughly 26 months of dividend obligations. The framework sets a minimum cash reserve of 12 months unless the board approves otherwise.

STRC: The Flagship of the Digital Credit Suite

STRC, listed on Nasdaq, is the most visible instrument in Strategy’s digital credit suite. Introduced in July 2025 as the largest US preferred stock IPO that year, it raised about $2.5 billion by issuing 28,011,111 shares at $90 each. It is a variable-rate, perpetual, non-convertible preferred stock paying monthly cash dividends.

The rate progression tells its story: starting at 9.00% in August 2025, it climbed monthly to 11.50% in March 2026, where it remained through June 2026. The rate-setting mechanism is designed to keep STRC trading near its $100 par value. When the price falls, increases of 25 to 50 basis points are applied; when it rises above $101, the board may decrease the rate or authorize follow-on offerings.

It is critical to understand that STRC is not collateralized by any specific Bitcoin on Strategy’s balance sheet. Disclosures are unambiguous: preferred securities have only a preferred claim on residual assets. STRC holders have no direct claim on any specific BTC; it is a yield instrument with a discretionary dividend attached.

STRC Dividend Rate Progression

MonthAnnual Rate
August 20259.00%
September 202510.00%
October 202510.25%
November 202510.50%
December 202510.75%
January 202611.00%
February 202611.25%
March to June 202611.50%

Key Numbers and Financial Pressures

As of June 2026, Strategy holds 847,363 BTC, purchased at a total cost of $64.1 billion, yielding an average cost per coin of about $75,651. At Bitcoin’s June 2026 price of roughly $60,018, the company carries an unrealized loss of approximately $15,633 per BTC, a staggering aggregate unrealized loss exceeding $13 billion. Yet accumulation continues: June 2026 saw net additions of 3,625 BTC, with 3,657 BTC purchased against just 32 BTC sold—the first Bitcoin disposition since 2022.

Equity raises are not trivial. MSTR has underperformed, with shares down about 50% in 2026. The stock’s discount to its underlying Bitcoin NAV is a recurring concern. When a company can only issue equity at a 30-40% discount to assets, each issuance is dilutive and erodes Bitcoin per share—the key metric for Saylor.

« It is not exit liquidity. It is active capital recycling designed to compound Bitcoin per share over the long run. »

Michael Saylor, Executive Chairman of Strategy

The convertible debt wall, with about $4.1 billion in maturities due in 2027 and 2028, adds pressure. S&P Global assigned Strategy a speculative-grade credit rating in October 2025, citing narrow business focus and concentration risk. Despite this, bulls argue that even if Bitcoin fell to $8,000, software revenue, USD Reserve, and ATM equity issuance would avoid forced sales.

Debates and Market Perspectives

The framework arrived amid public debate. Zach Pandl of Grayscale argued for selling at least $3 billion in Bitcoin to cover cash obligations, demonstrating financial discipline. CryptoQuant recommended pausing Bitcoin purchases entirely to rebuild cash reserves without selling, suggesting raising the 11.5% yield to attract more preferred stock buyers.

Samson Mow highlighted that STRC has a built-in self-repairing mechanism: when the stock falls below $100, Strategy halts new ATM issuance, reducing supply and pushing the price back toward par. These perspectives reflect genuine uncertainty around optimal capital management.

Strategy is now alone in corporate accumulation. According to CryptoQuant cited by CNBC in March 2026, all other corporate accumulators combined purchased about 1,000 BTC over 30 days, versus 45,000 BTC for Strategy alone. The company holds about 65% of all Bitcoin owned by publicly traded companies globally. The « 21 in 21 » initiative, announced in March 2026, aims to accumulate 21,000 Bitcoin per month, requiring comparable capital issuance.


Conclusion: Where Is Strategy Heading?

Market reaction to the framework was cautiously constructive: MSTR shares rose about 5.5% ahead of Monday’s Nasdaq open. The STRC discount to par at $71.25 against a $100 stated value signals the market does not believe the preferred stock is worth par, given reliance on equity issuance and Bitcoin appreciation. Success depends entirely on Bitcoin’s price trajectory over the next 18 to 24 months, the critical window before the largest convertible note maturities come due.

In essence, Strategy has launched an ambitious financial architecture for the digital asset era. The question remains whether the capital structure can withstand pressure long enough for the thesis to prove out in price terms.

Sources

This article is published for informational and educational purposes only. It does not constitute investment advice. Do your own research (DYOR) before any decision.

Telemac
Telemachttp://cryptoinfo.ch
Passionné de nouvelles technologies, j’explore l’univers de la blockchain et des cryptomonnaies pour partager l’actualité et les innovations du secteur.

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