Why Did Strategy Buy More Bitcoin? Strategy purchased another 1,587 bitcoin for approximately $100 million between June 8 and June 14, paying an average price of $63,024 per bitcoin, accordin

Why Did Strategy Buy More Bitcoin?
Strategy purchased another 1,587 bitcoin for approximately $100 million between June 8 and June 14, paying an average price of $63,024 per bitcoin, according to a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission. The purchase brings the company’s total holdings to 846,842 BTC, making Strategy by far the largest corporate bitcoin holder. The position is worth about $56 billion at current prices, compared with an aggregate purchase cost of roughly $64.1 billion, including fees and expenses.

The latest acquisition was funded through proceeds from at-the-market sales of Strategy’s
Class A common stock, MSTR. The company sold 1,732,553 shares last week for approximately $209 million. As of June 14, it still had $25.75 billion of MSTR shares available for issuance and sale under the program. The purchase extends Strategy’s core model: raise capital through equity or preferred stock issuance, use proceeds to accumulate bitcoin, and rely on
investor demand for bitcoin-linked corporate exposure to support the company’s market premium. That model remains active, but it is now operating in a weaker market environment than during previous accumulation phases.
What Does The Purchase Say About Strategy’s Balance Sheet?
Strategy’s bitcoin holdings now represent more than 4% of bitcoin’s fixed 21 million supply cap. That scale gives the company a unique position in public markets, but it also magnifies the effect of bitcoin price declines on its balance sheet and investor narrative. At current prices, the company’s bitcoin position implies roughly $8.1 billion in paper losses versus total acquisition cost. That does not immediately create a liquidity issue, but it places more pressure on the company’s ability to maintain investor confidence while continuing to issue stock and preferred instruments.

The company recently expanded its capital programs to include up to an additional $21 billion of MSTR, another $21 billion of STRC preferred stock, and $2.1 billion of STRK preferred stock. Those programs give Strategy significant financing capacity, but the cost and market reception of that capital matter more when the bitcoin price is below the company’s average purchase price. Co-founder and
executive chairman Michael Saylor previewed the latest acquisition with a chart captioned “Still adding dots,” a phrase widely read by market participants as a signal that the company would disclose new bitcoin purchases for the previous week.
Investor Takeaway
Strategy is still executing its bitcoin accumulation strategy, but the market is now focused less on the size of each purchase and more on funding quality, reserve coverage, preferred dividend obligations, and whether the company can preserve its valuation premium during a bitcoin drawdown.
Why Are Preferred Shares And USD Reserves Important?
Strategy’s STRC preferred stock had become a key funding tool for bitcoin purchases earlier this year. STRC is a variable-rate, cumulative preferred stock designed to pay monthly dividends with adjustable rates that help keep it near its $100 par value. It currently carries an annualized rate of 11.5%. However, STRC has struggled to regain par value since mid-May and has not been used to fund additional bitcoin purchases over the past month. That matters because Strategy’s capital model depends on keeping multiple financing channels open. If one instrument becomes less attractive, the company may need to rely more heavily on common stock sales or other preferred programs.

Shareholders last week approved a proposal to shift STRC dividends from monthly to twice-monthly payments. “Paying dividends on STRC twice a month is designed to stabilize price, dampen cyclicality, drive liquidity, and grow demand for STRC, while giving STRC holders a faster reinvestment opportunity,” Strategy President and CEO Phong Le said. The company also appears to have increased its dollar reserve. Strategy said its USD reserve stood at $1.1 billion as of June 14, up from $1 billion a week earlier. The reserve has become more important after analysts said a recent 32 BTC sale raised concerns in the market and suggested the company may need a larger cash buffer to support dividend payments.
What Does This Mean For The Bitcoin Treasury Trade?
Strategy remains the central company in the
digital asset treasury market, but the wider sector is under pressure. Public companies adopting bitcoin acquisition models have expanded sharply, with nearly 200 firms now holding bitcoin as part of their treasury strategy. Other large holders include Twenty One, Metaplanet, MARA,
Bitcoin Standard Treasury Company, Bullish, Strive, SpaceX, Coinbase, and Riot Platforms. Despite that growth, many treasury companies have seen their share prices fall sharply from their summer 2025 peaks as market cap-to-net asset value ratios contracted. Strategy’s own stock remains down significantly from prior highs, with different data providers placing its market value relative to net asset value below or modestly above 1 depending on treatment of debt and preferred securities. That compression is important because the premium over bitcoin holdings is what makes the treasury model more valuable than simply holding the underlying asset. If investors are no longer willing to pay that premium, issuing equity to buy more bitcoin becomes less accretive and more sensitive to market timing. Strategy’s latest $100 million purchase shows that the company is not retreating from its bitcoin strategy. The more important question is whether investors continue to reward the structure while bitcoin trades below Strategy’s average purchase price and preferred dividend commitments remain part of the funding stack. The next phase of the trade will depend on bitcoin’s price path, demand for Strategy’s capital instruments, and the company’s ability to maintain liquidity without damaging the narrative that has supported its premium. For now, Strategy is still buying, but the market is watching the financing mechanics as closely as the bitcoin total.