High-Yield, No Debt, No Dilution: Why Bitcoin Treasury Companies Are Aggressively Promoting Preferred Stock Financing?
Bitcoin-backed preferred shares, led by companies like Strategy and followed by newer entrants such as Strive, have grown to a roughly $13 billion market in under two years. These instruments offer high yields, attracting significant capital. A 2026 report by BitcoinTreasuries.net and Apyx projects this segment could grow from nearly 1% to 3-5% of the global $1.3 trillion preferred share market by 2030, with long-term potential reaching 10%.
This financial tool addresses a core dilemma for companies holding Bitcoin as a treasury asset. It allows firms like Michael Saylor's Strategy to raise long-term capital for purchasing more Bitcoin without diluting common shareholders or taking on debt with fixed repayment schedules. In exchange, preferred shareholders receive priority dividends, converting Bitcoin's volatility into a stable income product for yield-focused investors.
Yields on these securities, ranging from 10.8% to 15.2%, far exceed traditional savings accounts. Strategy's issues dominate the market, with Strive's offering being a smaller player. The report identifies strong institutional demand, potentially reaching $10.9-$21.8 billion, but supply is constrained by the limited pool of corporate-held Bitcoin available as collateral—approximately 1.26 million BTC valued around $83 billion.
A key safety feature is the high collateral coverage ratio of 3.8x to 4.5x, meaning each dollar of preferred equity is backed by $3.8-$4.5 in Bitcoin. Issuers require clean balance sheets and substantial scale. Risks are structural: companies like Strategy act as volatility amplifiers, and dividend sustainability relies on continued capital raises during Bitcoin price appreciation. However, both Strategy and Strive maintain cash reserves to cover at least 12 months of payments. The market is currently in a "0 to 1" phase where demand significantly outpaces supply, favoring early issuers.
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