Author: Xiao Bing, Deep Tide TechFlow
Last July, when Michael Saylor pitched STRC to Wall Street, he used a clever analogy: it was a "digital credit engine." Investors bought this preferred stock, receiving high annual dividends of 11.5%. Strategy would use the raised funds to buy Bitcoin. Bitcoin would rise, STRC would stabilize near its $100 face value, and the company would continue issuing more shares and buying more Bitcoin. Capital would flow endlessly in this closed loop, with every participant winning.
Less than a year later, that engine has stalled.
On June 19th, STRC hit a historic low of $85.32 during trading. The previous trading day, it had briefly touched $82.53, a discount of over 17% to its face value. The RSI fell to 24, entering an extremely oversold zone. Trading volume surged to nearly 8 million shares, far exceeding the average daily volume of 3.6 million shares.
For a preferred stock designed to "stabilize near $100," falling to $85 signals a loosening of its underlying logic.
What Kind of Machine Did Saylor Build?
To understand STRC's collapse, one must first understand the purpose for which it was created.
STRC stands for "Variable Rate Series A Perpetual Stretch Preferred Stock." It listed in July 2025 at an issue price of $90, with approximately 28 million shares issued, raising $2.5 billion. Its dividend rate adjusts monthly and is currently set at 11.5%. The design intent was clear: through a floating-rate mechanism, STRC would always trade close to its $100 face value.
When STRC trades above $100, Strategy could continuously issue new shares via its ATM (at-the-market) offering plan, converting the premium into cash, which would then be funneled entirely into Bitcoin. This was the core gear of Saylor's capital machine. The MSTR common stock was meant to absorb Bitcoin's volatility, while STRC was meant to provide a steady stream of ammunition.
In the April proxy statement, Strategy was still boasting about this machine's data: STRC market cap of $6.4 billion, 30-day average trading volume of $339 million, volatility of just 1.7%. Saylor called it an "acyclical financing tool," meaning the machine could run regardless of Bitcoin's price movements.
Reality gave him a resounding slap.
A Triple Blow
STRC's collapse is driven by three mutually reinforcing factors.
First, Bitcoin's price has been halved. BTC fell from its all-time high last October to around $63,000, a drop of over 50%. On June 17th, the first FOMC meeting chaired by new Fed Chair Kevin Warsh released hawkish signals. The dot plot showed 9 officials forecasting a rate hike in 2026, the PCE inflation expectation was raised to 3.6%, and forward guidance on interest rates was completely removed. Bitcoin decoupled from U.S. stocks that day; while the S&P 500 and Nasdaq soared on news of a U.S.-Iran peace deal, BTC bucked the trend and fell.
Second, the dividend coverage ratio is in distress. In May, Strategy used $1.5 billion in cash to repay convertible bonds maturing in 2029. This single move directly compressed STRC's dividend coverage period from 24 months to about 7 months. For 28 million shares of STRC, an annualized dividend rate of 11.5% based on a $100 face value requires over $320 million in annual cash dividend payments. After the cash reserves shrank, the market began to question: where will the money come from?
The answer was revealed on June 1st. Strategy disclosed that between May 26th and 31st, the company sold 32 Bitcoins at an average price of $77,135, raising approximately $2.5 million to pay STRC's dividends.
This was Saylor's first Bitcoin sale since 2022.
32 BTC is negligible against Strategy's holdings of 840,000 Bitcoin, accounting for less than 0.004%. The amount is also only $2.5 million. Saylor's own explanation was "taking a vaccine"—selling once proactively to acclimate the market and eliminate panic expectations.
The market didn't buy it. MSTR fell over 4% in after-hours trading. Investors' logic is simple: when someone who promised to "never sell Bitcoin" starts selling, regardless of the amount, the faith has cracked.
Third, competitor Strive's SATA is drawing investors away from STRC. SATA is also a Bitcoin-backed preferred stock, currently trading near its $100 face value with an annual yield of about 13%, higher than STRC's 11.5%. More crucially, starting June 16th, SATA switched to paying dividends every business day, a much higher frequency than STRC's semi-monthly payments. Strive has no outstanding debt, and SATA sits at the highest priority in the capital structure, not needing to compete with convertible bond holders for cash flow.
The price gap between STRC and SATA has widened to about $15, a historic record. Both are Bitcoin-backed high-yield preferred stocks, one trading at face value, the other at a 17% discount. The market is voting with its feet.
The Reverse Flywheel
The chain reaction triggered by STRC falling below face value is precisely the mirror image of Saylor's intended capital machine design.
The positive cycle was: STRC above $100 → ATM issuance → cash inflow → buy Bitcoin → Bitcoin rises → STRC stabilizes → continue issuing.
The reverse flywheel is: Bitcoin falls → STRC falls below face value → ATM suspended → financing channel closed → forced to sell Bitcoin for dividends → market confidence damaged → STRC falls further.
Strategy has already suspended its ATM premium issuance plan for STRC. This means the company has lost a key Bitcoin acquisition tool. Meanwhile, short-selling activity for STRC has noticeably increased in the options market.
Saylor's rebuttal has some logic: in a recent public appearance, he did the math—for every 1 BTC sold to pay dividends, Strategy could buy back 10 to 20 BTC through other capital operations. The entire model only needs Bitcoin to appreciate 2.3% annually to run perpetually. Strategy currently holds over 840,000 Bitcoin with an average cost of about $75,540. At the current price of $63,000, that's a paper loss exceeding $10 billion, with Q1 already recording a net loss of $12.54 billion.
Mathematically, Saylor's argument might hold water. The problem is, the market never looks at math alone. When STRC's price signal continues to deteriorate, when the "sell Bitcoin for dividends" narrative replaces the "never sell Bitcoin" faith, even the most precise model can't stop capital outflows.
The STRC Test is a Test of Faith
STRC falling to $85 does not threaten Strategy's survival. Preferred stock ranks above common stock but below debt in the capital structure, so bondholders' interests are unaffected. There is also no risk of Saylor's 840,000 Bitcoin being forcibly liquidated.
What is truly being tested is something more fundamental: can the Bitcoin treasury company model sustain its financing machine during a bear market?
Last year, STRC was Saylor's proudest invention, a financial product that allowed traditional fixed-income investors to participate in the Bitcoin narrative. Today, it has become a mirror, reflecting the fragility of leveraged strategies in a counter-cyclical environment.
Bitcoin only needs to rise 2.3% to get this machine running again. But against the backdrop of the Fed releasing hawkish signals, rekindled rate hike expectations, and a Fear & Greed Index dropping to 22 (Extreme Fear), that seemingly insignificant 2.3% carries more weight than ever before.






