Strategy Inc. has added another 13,927 Bitcoin to its colossal holdings, but the method of financing this latest $1 billion acquisition is drawing as much scrutiny as the purchase itself. The software firm, which completed its rebrand from MicroStrategy in August 2025, funded the buy entirely through the sale of a special class of preferred shares, a move that highlights both its relentless commitment to Bitcoin and the growing complexity of its balance sheet.
The company sold over ten million shares of its variable-rate preferred stock, ticker STRC, between April 6 and 12, raising net proceeds of approximately $1.0 billion. It immediately deployed that capital to buy Bitcoin at an average price of $71,902 per coin. This brings Strategy’s total Bitcoin treasury to a staggering 780,897 BTC, a hoard that co-founder Michael Saylor notes represents over 3.7% of the entire Bitcoin supply. At its current pace, the company is a mere 19,103 Bitcoin away from hitting the symbolic 800,000 BTC milestone.
While this mechanism avoids diluting common MSTR stockholders, it is building a layered capital structure that analysts are watching closely. A key metric known as “Amplification” — total debt plus preferred capital divided by Bitcoin reserves — has risen to 33%. At the top of Strategy’s capital stack sit approximately $8.25 billion in convertible notes. Below that are various series of preferred shares, including STRC, STRK, STRD, and STRF, with a combined notional value of around $10.3 billion. The common MSTR equity, which bears all ultimate profits and losses, sits at the bottom.
Trading activity underscores this shift. Data from the MSTR dashboard shows that on a recent Friday, STRC shares worth $526 million changed hands, roughly double the average volume. In contrast, MSTR common stock traded $1.7 billion, notably below its 30-day average of $2.5 billion.
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The company’s first-quarter 2026 financials laid bare the volatility inherent in this strategy. Strategy recorded an unrealized loss of $14.46 billion on its Bitcoin holdings. A latent tax benefit of $2.42 billion partially offset this paper loss. As of March 31, the Bitcoin portfolio was carried on the books at a value of $51.65 billion, below its historical cost basis.
Despite the significant paper loss and a share price far from its 52-week high of 391.80 Euros set in July 2025, analyst sentiment remains cautiously positive. The consensus among 14 covering analysts is still a “Strong Buy,” with an average 12-month price target of $342. However, some are adjusting their models. TD Cowen recently lowered its price target for Strategy by 20% to $350, citing weaker Bitcoin assumptions and revised expectations for future price appreciation.
Saylor has framed the financial hurdle for the model as manageable, stating Bitcoin needs to appreciate by only about 2.05% annually to sustainably cover the STRC dividends without issuing new common stock. In European trading, the MSTR share price reacted to the recent news with a modest gain of just over three percent, trading at 115.54 Euros. The stock remains down nearly 58% year-to-date, a reflection of the high-wire act of combining a legacy software analytics business with a massive, leveraged bet on a single digital asset.
With its Bitcoin reserves now decisively anchoring the company’s valuation, the focus turns to the next capital raise. The speed at which the Amplification ratio climbs depends directly on the volume of the next STRC issuance—an event that market observers believe is not far off.
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