Why Is Strategy’s Bitcoin Reserve Back In Focus?
Strategy’s financing model is facing renewed scrutiny after Zach Pandl, head of research at Grayscale, said he hopes the company will sell at least $3 billion in bitcoin to cover most of its cash obligations for the next 2 years. In a Saturday post on X, Pandl argued that a bitcoin sale could help restore market confidence in the company’s capital structure. His view puts Strategy’s balance sheet at the center of a wider debate over whether the world’s largest publicly listed corporate bitcoin holder should keep accumulating BTC or use part of its holdings to support its credit-linked securities. Strategy holds 847,363 BTC, making its financing choices a proxy for how far bitcoin-backed corporate structures can stretch under market pressure. The company has built its strategy around raising capital, acquiring bitcoin, and issuing securities tied to investor demand for bitcoin exposure. That model works more easily when equity prices are strong, bitcoin is rising, and preferred stock trades close to par. The current setup is less forgiving. The pressure is clearest in STRC, Strategy’s flagship “digital credit” preferred stock designed to trade near its $100 par value. STRC has been sliding for weeks and fell as low as $71.25 on Friday, a 28.75% discount to par. Strategy’s common stock, MSTR, also weakened, closing Friday at $82.31 after falling 26.86% across the trading week.What Is The Problem With STRC?
STRC matters because it is tied directly to Strategy’s effort to create a preferred-stock market around bitcoin-backed credit. The security is intended to behave closer to a yield product than a high-volatility equity instrument, with the $100 reference price acting as a central anchor for investor confidence. When STRC trades far below par, the market is effectively questioning whether the current yield is high enough for the risk. Strategy faces an annual preferred dividend obligation of about $1.2 billion, driven primarily by STRC. That obligation has made the company’s cash reserve and dividend coverage increasingly important to investors. Pandl said he expects Strategy to raise STRC’s dividend rate by 50 basis points, adding roughly $100 million in annual obligations over 2 years. But he said that outcome “probably does not help market confidence.” His preferred alternative is a bitcoin sale large enough to cover most near-term cash needs, which could reduce uncertainty around funding and dividend coverage. The debate is not only about liquidity. It is about the credibility of Strategy’s capital structure. If investors believe the company must keep increasing dividend rates to defend preferred stock pricing, the cost of the model rises. If Strategy sells bitcoin, it may strengthen cash coverage but weaken the perception that its bitcoin treasury is untouchable.Investor Takeaway
Strategy’s challenge is no longer only the price of bitcoin. The market is now testing whether its preferred-stock structure can hold investor confidence while dividend obligations rise and cash coverage narrows.




