#STRC跌破面值11%創上市新低 Strategy's perpetual preferred stock, STRC, has crashed to a record low of $89 as of June 17, 2026 falling 11% below its $100 par value and marking the deepest discount since the instrument began trading in July 2025. The intraday low touched $88.50 before a modest recovery to the $89 close, a level that represents the third consecutive session of decline and signals a fundamental breakdown in the mechanism that was designed to keep STRC trading near par. This is not merely a technical dip; it is a structural repricing that reflects mounting concerns over dividend coverage, competitive displacement, and the sustainability of Strategy's leveraged Bitcoin accumulation model.



STRC was engineered to function as a "short-duration, high-yield savings account" a perpetual preferred stock with a floating monthly dividend rate set to incentivize trading close to its $100 par value. The June dividend rate stands at 11.50% annualized, a figure that Strategy has progressively increased from lower levels in an attempt to maintain par proximity. But the market is now telling a different story: even at 11.5%, the yield is insufficient to compensate holders for the risks they perceive, and the stock has drifted to an 11% discount that contradicts the instrument's core design premise.

The catalysts behind this collapse are multiple and interconnected. First, Bitcoin prices have weakened, trading near $61,500 as of early June, reducing the market value of Strategy's enormous BTC treasury and thereby diminishing the perceived coverage ratio for STRC's dividend obligations. Strategy holds approximately $887 million in annual preferred dividend obligations across its perpetual offerings, funded by a $2.25 billion reserve but as BTC declines, the ratio of reserves to obligations compresses, raising questions about whether dividends can be sustained without further equity issuance or asset sales.

Second, competitive pressure from Strive's SATA has fundamentally altered the preferred stock landscape. SATA, Strive's bitcoin-backed preferred security, trades close to its $100 par value and offers an annualized yield of approximately 13% nearly 1.5 percentage points above STRC's 11.5%. SATA also pays dividends daily rather than monthly, and operates with a debt-free capital structure that eliminates the leverage risk inherent in Strategy's model. Investors are increasingly rotating from STRC to SATA, creating a self-reinforcing downward spiral for STRC's price as capital migrates to the superior alternative.

Third, Strategy's recent decision to sell 32 Bitcoin the first sale since 2022 rattled preferred holders and raised existential questions about the firm's commitment to its "never sell" doctrine. While Strategy characterized the sale as an effort to "inoculate" the market to the idea that it could pare holdings to pay preferred dividends, the message was received differently by STRC holders: if the company is selling BTC to cover obligations, the structural integrity of the dividend-backed par-value thesis is compromised.

The broader macro environment compounds these pressures. The Federal Reserve's hawkish pivot under new Chair Kevin Warsh, with inflation above 4% and potential rate hikes on the horizon, strengthens the dollar and increases real yields conditions that historically weigh on Bitcoin and, by extension, on Bitcoin-derived instruments like STRC. When risk-free Treasury yields exceed 4% and preferred stock alternatives offer 13% with daily payments and no debt, STRC's 11.5% monthly dividend on a stock trading 11% below par becomes a mathematically unattractive proposition.

Grayscale's Head of Research, Zach Pandl, has publicly stated that "Strategy's leveraged business model is under pressure, and that has increased volatility for the entire bitcoin market." This assessment reflects a growing consensus that Strategy's ability to accumulate new BTC through equity issuance the engine that powered its treasury growth is increasingly constrained by both share price depression and preferred stock market dislocation. STRC's market cap has ballooned to $9.55 billion since its $2.5 billion IPO, creating recurring dividend costs that consume reserves and limit strategic flexibility.

Shareholders recently approved a shift from monthly to semi-monthly dividend payments, a governance change intended to improve STRC's eligibility for low-volatility indices and smooth the drawdown patterns around record dates. While this demonstrates that the instrument's governance remains functional and holders are engaged, it does not address the fundamental competitive and structural challenges driving the price below par.

For crypto market participants, STRC's decline below its $100 par value at an 11% discount is more than a preferred stock story it is a barometer of the stress propagating through the Bitcoin ecosystem when leverage, competition, and macro headwinds converge. The same dynamics depressing STRC leveraged BTC exposure, elevated real yields, and competitive alternatives are playing out across crypto markets. Understanding the STRC repricing provides insight into the broader risk calculus that every Bitcoin-linked instrument must navigate in 2026.

The par value was the promise. The market has delivered a different verdict.

#MyGateTradeStory

#STRC

@Gate_Square
BTC-2.10%
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