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Strategy’s STRC preferred stock slides 11% below par as Bitcoin treasury model faces market skepticism

ByMicah AbiodunMicah Abiodun
4 mins read

STRC, Strategy’s variable-rate perpetual preferred stock, ended at $89.15 per share on June 17, more than 11% below its $100 par value.

The drop has raised fresh questions about investor appetite for Bitcoin-backed yield instruments. STRC was designed to offer a variable dividend while helping Strategy raise capital for its Bitcoin treasury strategy, but its widening discount now signals pressure on that funding model.

Investors who bought near par have already absorbed a mark-to-market loss roughly equal to a full year of STRC’s current 11.5% annual dividend rate.

Euro Pacific chief economist and global strategist Peter Schiff criticized the structure on X, describing it as a dangerous trap for “risk-averse retirees.”

STRC slips below par as yield doubts grow

STRC’s fall below par matters because the instrument is central to Strategy’s preferred-stock funding strategy.

The security is supposed to trade close to $100, with the variable dividend rate helping stabilize demand. But the drop to around $89 suggests investors are demanding a higher effective yield or questioning the durability of the payout.

Reports on June 18 say that the market is betting on higher yields, citing waning confidence in STRC’s dividend stability and Strategy’s funding strategy for future Bitcoin purchases.

Schiff argued that Strategy may face a difficult choice. If the company raises STRC’s yield toward 13%, it could stabilize the preferred stock but increase the cost of capital. If it does not raise the yield, STRC could remain under pressure.

Strategy points to Bitcoin reserves for coverage

Strategy moved to reassure holders on June 17, posting on X that it has “32 years of dividend coverage through our $BTC Reserve.”

The statement appears to respond to concerns over whether Strategy can maintain preferred dividends without relying heavily on common-stock dilution through its at-the-market program.

However, the claim should be read as Strategy’s own framing. Its Bitcoin reserve may represent long-term balance-sheet coverage, but its cash reserve coverage is much shorter.

On the same day, the STRC tracker estimated that 4.8 million STRC shares traded with no ATM issuance activity. The tracker said the figures suggested Strategy did not issue new STRC shares during that period, though such estimates remain subject to later confirmation through company filings.

Strategy had also promoted STRC’s growth trajectory a day earlier, saying the instrument was scaling at a roughly 350% annualized rate.

On June 15, the company announced that STRC would shift to a semi-monthly dividend schedule, with the first record date under the new cadence set for June 30 and the first payment date expected on July 15, subject to board declaration.

The discount threatens future BTC financing

The widening gap between STRC’s market price and its $100 par value matters beyond current holders.

Strategy is the largest corporate Bitcoin holder, and its preferred-stock programs have become part of how it funds additional Bitcoin purchases. If investors lose confidence in instruments such as STRC, Strategy may find it harder or more expensive to raise capital for future BTC buys.

That could reduce one of the crypto market’s most visible sources of institutional Bitcoin demand. Strategy’s ability to issue preferred stock at attractive terms depends on whether investors believe the dividend model is sustainable and whether the company can maintain confidence in its capital structure.

A higher dividend rate could support STRC’s market price, but it would also increase Strategy’s funding costs. That tradeoff matters because the higher the cost of capital becomes, the harder it is to justify using preferred equity to finance more Bitcoin accumulation.

Competing preferred products add pressure

STRC is also facing pressure from weaker Bitcoin prices and new competition.

Investor and analyst Betirement said three factors are weighing on the security: Bitcoin’s decline from the $80,000 range to the $60,000 range, competition from Strive’s SATA preferred product, and rotation into Strategy’s other preferred instruments, including STRD, STRK, and STRF.

Lower Bitcoin prices weaken confidence in the treasury backing the model. At the same time, competing products with higher or more frequent payouts can pull yield-focused investors away from STRC.

The Strive comparison is especially important because it suggests the Bitcoin treasury preferred-stock market is no longer controlled by one issuer. According to STRC.live, Strive acquired an estimated 203 BTC through roughly 214,000 SATA shares on the same day STRC was sliding.

June 30 becomes the next test

STRC’s next key date is June 30, when the first record date under the new semi-monthly dividend schedule arrives.

Investors will watch whether Strategy raises the dividend rate above the current 11.5% in the next monthly reset. A higher rate could help pull STRC closer to par, but it would also make future Bitcoin financing more expensive.

For now, STRC’s discount is a warning signal. It shows that investors are demanding more compensation for holding Bitcoin-linked yield products, especially while Bitcoin trades lower and competing instruments offer attractive alternatives.

The outcome will matter for more than one preferred stock. If Strategy can stabilize STRC, it may preserve a major funding channel for future Bitcoin purchases. If the discount widens, one of the crypto market’s largest institutional buyers could face a higher cost of capital.

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FAQs

What is STRC and why is it trading below par?

STRC is Strategy's variable-rate perpetual preferred stock, currently paying an 11.5% annual dividend with semi-monthly cash payouts. It closed at $89.15 on June 17, roughly 11% below its $100 par value, as investors priced in concerns about dividend sustainability and competition from rival products like Strive's SATA

How does Strategy say it can cover STRC dividends?

Strategy stated on June 17 that it has "32 years of dividend coverage through our $BTC Reserve," meaning the company believes it can fund preferred stock dividends by selling portions of its Bitcoin holdings if necessary.

What happens if Strategy raises the STRC dividend rate?

According to Peter Schiff, raising the yield to 13% would require Strategy to sell more common stock (MSTR) at larger discounts to fund the higher payout, which would dilute existing shareholders while attempting to stabilize the preferred stock price.

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Disclaimer. The information provided is not trading advice. Cryptopolitan.com holds no liability for any investments made based on the information provided on this page. We strongly recommend independent research and/or consultation with a qualified professional before making any investment decisions.

Micah Abiodun

Micah Abiodun

Micah Abiodun makes good use of his Environmental Engineering and Management (MSc) at Tallinn University of Technology (TalTech) to polish content and price prediction news at Cryptopolitan. Now on his 7th year in the crypto media space, he covers major cryptos, altcoins, DeFi, stablecoins, macro trends, and emerging tech.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​

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