Strategy Inc. raised $181 million through an equity offering, deploying $101.3 million to acquire 1,550 Bitcoin while retaining the rest to strengthen its cash position. The decision extended its operational runway from 6.3 months to about seven months but diluted its per-share Bitcoin holdings by 0.19%.
The dilution occurred as the company’s adjusted net asset value metric, known as mNAV, remained below its required 1.30 threshold during the share sale, meaning the issuance reduced rather than increased Bitcoin exposure per share.
Deviation from core bitcoin accumulation model
Strategy’s capital model is built on issuing shares at a premium to net asset value and using the full proceeds to buy Bitcoin, thereby increasing Bitcoin per share. In this instance, mNAV stayed below the required level, and not all proceeds were allocated to Bitcoin purchases.
The company had previously set its profitability threshold at 1.22 before revising it to 1.30 ahead of the June transaction. Issuing equity below that level while diverting funds to cash reserves marks a departure from its stated capital efficiency framework.
Holdings rise but per-share metric slips
While total Bitcoin holdings increased following the purchase, the per-share metric declined, a key performance indicator for the firm’s primary listed entity. At the same time, Strategy boosted its liquidity to support operations and meet dividend obligations tied to its secondary digital asset segment.
Filings indicate that the firm adjusted its policy of allocating 100% of equity proceeds to Bitcoin, opting instead to preserve capital for broader business needs. This shift stabilizes near-term cash flow but weakens the direct linkage between share issuance and Bitcoin exposure.
Liquidity takes priority over strict bitcoin focus
Chief executive Michael Saylor previously emphasized increasing Bitcoin per share as a central objective. The latest move suggests a recalibration toward balancing that goal with operational stability.
Analysts say continued market weakness could force similar decisions, including further reallocations to cash reserves or delays in planned dividend distributions. A recovery in digital asset prices, however, could restore the company’s ability to meet mNAV thresholds and resume accretive share issuance.
Market pressure shapes strategy
The transaction comes amid a broader downturn in the cryptocurrency market. Bitcoin recently fell to around $61,500, its lowest level since February, while U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs recorded 13 consecutive days of net outflows exceeding $3.4 billion. Sentiment remains weak, with the Crypto Fear & Greed Index registering “extreme fear.”
Strategy now holds 845,256 Bitcoin acquired at a total cost of nearly $64 billion, implying an average purchase price of $75,680 per coin. The latest acquisition, made at an average of $65,332, marginally reduced the company’s overall cost basis.
Key indicators to watch
The company’s ability to return to its original strategy now largely depends on whether its stock regains a sufficient premium over its adjusted net asset value. If mNAV remains below 1.30, future share issuance could continue to dilute Bitcoin per share.
Attention is also turning to Strategy’s reported $1 billion cash balance and its commitments to preferred-share dividends. These obligations introduce competing demands on capital, challenging the balance between maintaining liquidity and expanding Bitcoin exposure.
To better manage similar equity and tokenized equity strategies, explore how Bitcoin-linked stock structures can impact investor exposure.
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