Strategy faces growing pressure as bitcoin holdings fall below cost
Strategy Inc., formerly MicroStrategy, is under rising financial strain as the value of its bitcoin holdings drops well below its purchase price, exposing weaknesses in its leveraged capital structure.
The company holds 847,363 bitcoin acquired for about $64.1 billion, with an average cost of $75,651 per coin. At current prices, those holdings are worth roughly $54.7 billion, leaving the position about $9.4 billion, or 14.6%, underwater.
Balance sheet strain comes into focus
The pressure is now extending beyond paper losses. Strategy’s capital structure, which includes unsecured debt and preferred equity, is being tested during the ongoing bitcoin downturn.
There is no specific liquidation trigger, but liquidity demands are building. The company faces around $1.7 billion in annual preferred dividend obligations, while a $1.4 billion cash reserve would not cover even a full year of those payments. Additional risks loom from noteholder put options that begin in 2027.
Although its bitcoin holdings remain unpledged due to the unsecured nature of its debt, financial stress is appearing through limited funding flexibility and the growing cost of servicing obligations.
Equity trades as leveraged bitcoin exposure
Strategy’s common stock, trading under MSTR, increasingly behaves as a leveraged bet on bitcoin rather than a straightforward reflection of asset value. After accounting for debt and preferred claims, the stock still shows a premium to its net asset value, leaving traders exposed to amplified price swings.
At the same time, the company’s ability to sustain its bitcoin acquisition model has deteriorated. That model relies on its market capitalization exceeding the value of its bitcoin holdings by a certain margin. The ratio has now dropped to about 0.76x, well below the roughly 1.22x level needed to support accretive purchases.
This shift signals that newly raised capital is no longer meaningfully expanding bitcoin holdings but is instead being used to meet financial obligations.
Recent filings show shift in capital use
Recent disclosures highlight how this dynamic is playing out. Between June 15 and June 21, Strategy raised $335.5 million by selling more than 2.7 million shares. Only $34.9 million of that total was used to purchase 520 bitcoin, at an average price of $67,068.
This reflects a broader pivot toward preserving liquidity rather than aggressively accumulating bitcoin, at a time when the cryptocurrency is trading near $64,000—far below the company’s average cost basis.
That cost basis has become a key reference point for the market, acting as both a psychological and technical threshold tied to the company’s financial health.
Dilution cycle intensifies as cash flow remains weak
The company’s core software business generated revenue and gross profit in 2025 but failed to produce positive cash flow, increasing dependence on external financing.
As a result, Strategy has entered a cycle where issuing new shares funds both operations and dividend commitments. This ongoing dilution has weighed heavily on the stock, which has declined more than 70% over the past year.
Market sentiment remains cautious, with options data showing a put-to-call ratio of 1.13, indicating bearish positioning among traders.
The situation is further complicated by the fact that the company’s stock has, at times, traded below the value of its underlying bitcoin. This undermines the logic of issuing equity to grow holdings per share, as new capital effectively supports debt and preferred obligations rather than expanding asset value.
Broader market conditions add pressure
Strategy’s challenges are unfolding alongside weakening demand for bitcoin exposure through traditional vehicles. US-listed spot bitcoin ETFs recorded $8 billion in net outflows in June 2026, signaling a broader pullback in risk appetite.
This shift reduces a key source of external support for bitcoin prices, indirectly increasing pressure on companies with large concentrated holdings.
Outlook hinges on bitcoin recovery and market access
In the near term, Strategy is expected to continue relying on share issuance, drawing down reserves, and potentially selling small amounts of bitcoin as it navigates current conditions.
Its large position—representing nearly 4% of all mined bitcoin—adds another layer of complexity, as any significant changes in holdings could influence market sentiment.
The company’s trajectory will largely depend on whether bitcoin prices recover and whether it can maintain access to capital markets. Until then, its leveraged structure and ongoing funding needs remain central risks shaping both its financial stability and stock performance.
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