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Markets

STRC Drops To $86.25 As Strategy’s Bitcoin Credit Trade Faces Deeper Test

Strategy’s STRC preferred stock fell to $86.25, extending its drop below the $100 level the security was designed to trade around and deepening the market test facing Michael Saylor’s Bitcoin

AnonymousCryptoCompass newsroom
June 18, 2026
3 min read
NEWS
STRC Drops To $86.25 As Strategy’s Bitcoin Credit Trade Faces Deeper Test
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Strategy’s STRC preferred stock fell to $86.25, extending its drop below the $100 level the security was designed to trade around and deepening the market test facing Michael Saylor’s Bitcoin-backed credit model.

The move follows yesterday’s slide, when STRC fell 8.2% below par as Strategy’s Bitcoin funding model faced a fresh test. The latest decline pushes that discount wider, making the preferred stock less of a stable credit layer and more of a live referendum on how much yield investors now demand to fund Strategy’s Bitcoin balance-sheet strategy.

STRC, also known as Stretch, is Strategy’s perpetual preferred stock and currently pays an 11.50% annual dividend in cash. Its variable dividend rate is adjusted monthly to encourage the shares to trade around $100, giving Strategy a tool to support the preferred stock without relying only on market sentiment.

That mechanism is now under pressure. At $86.25, STRC trades far enough below par that the market is effectively asking for more compensation than the stated coupon suggests.

Discount To Par Becomes The Main Signal

STRC was built to sit inside Strategy’s broader capital stack. Bitcoin remains the reserve asset, MSTR gives equity holders leveraged upside to that reserve, and STRC is meant to offer a shorter-duration, income-focused security for investors who want exposure to Strategy without taking the full volatility of common stock.

That pitch was central to Saylor’s recent Bitcoin capital stack presentation, where he framed Strategy’s securities as different layers of a Bitcoin-based financial structure.

The problem is that credit investors price risk differently from equity traders. When STRC moves deeper below $100, it signals that investors are not only reacting to Bitcoin’s price. They are also pricing Strategy’s dividend obligations, future issuance needs, common-stock volatility and the depth of demand for Bitcoin-backed preferred shares.

Dividend Cost Moves Into Focus

Strategy’s preferred-stock complex gives the company another route to raise capital for Bitcoin purchases, but it also creates recurring cash costs. STRC’s cash dividend is paid semi-monthly, and the rate can be adjusted as Strategy tries to keep the instrument close to par.

A deeper discount creates a difficult trade-off. Raising the rate could make STRC more attractive and help pull the price closer to $100, but it would also raise Strategy’s funding cost. Leaving the rate unchanged would protect cash flow, but it may not be enough if investors continue to sell the security.

That tension became more visible after Strategy disclosed its first Bitcoin sale since 2022, a small 32 BTC transaction expected to support preferred-stock distributions. The sale did not materially change the company’s Bitcoin position, but it showed that the capital stack now has cash obligations that can affect treasury behavior.

STRC’s move to $86.25 brings that issue back to the front of the market. The next signal will be whether Strategy adjusts the dividend rate aggressively enough to support the preferred shares, or whether the discount keeps widening and forces investors to reprice the cost of funding one of the largest corporate Bitcoin treasuries.

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