#STRCHitsAllTimeLow



STRC Hits All-Time Low — Strategy's Leverage Cascade Deepens as Bitcoin Funding Engine Stalls

Strategy's Series A perpetual preferred stock, known as STRC or "Stretch," has plunged to an all-time low in the $73–78 range, representing a devastating 24–27% discount to its $100 par value. The preferred stock, which Strategy has marketed as a "money market-like" instrument designed to maintain a stable price near $100, has completely de-anchored — falling below its $90 IPO price for the first time since its July 2025 launch. At current prices, STRC now offers an effective yield of approximately 15–16% based on its $11.50 annual dividend, reflecting the market's deep skepticism about the security's risk profile.

The collapse has far-reaching implications for Strategy's Bitcoin acquisition machine. When STRC traded above par, the company issued new shares through its at-the-market program and deployed the proceeds into Bitcoin purchases. With STRC now well below $100, that entire funding channel has been effectively shut down. Strategy purchased only 1 BTC through this mechanism in May 2026, a stark contrast to the aggressive accumulation pace that defined 2024 and 2025. The company's recent sale of 32 Bitcoin for $2.5 million to fund STRC dividend distributions marked only the second time Strategy has ever sold Bitcoin, breaking Michael Saylor's long-standing "never sell" doctrine.

Strategy's common stock has not been spared. MSTR shares crashed more than 10% to a two-year low near $92, breaking below $100 for the first time since March 2024. CryptoQuant published a research note urging Strategy to halt Bitcoin accumulation entirely and restore its cash reserves, warning that the company sits on an estimated $10.6 billion in unrealized losses. A securities class action investigation by Rosen Law Firm has been announced, adding legal uncertainty to the mix. At current Bitcoin prices around $59,000, Strategy's 2024, 2025, and 2026 cost basis cohorts are all underwater.

Analysts identify this as a leverage-driven liquidation cascade rather than a fundamental shift in Strategy's thesis. But the feedback loop is self-reinforcing: falling Bitcoin prices depress STRC, which closes the funding window, which limits Bitcoin buying, which removes a key source of demand, which further depresses prices. For anyone tracking the Bitcoin ecosystem, Strategy's STRC has become the canary in the coal mine for institutional leverage stress.
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#STRCHitsAllTimeLow
STRC Hits All Time Low as Strategy Preferred Stock Breaks $100 Floor

Strategy’s Variable Rate Series A Perpetual Stretch Preferred Stock, ticker STRC, just printed its weakest session since launch. The security traded as low as 73.62 dollars on June 26, 2026 and closed at 75.69 dollars, more than 24 percent below its 100 dollar par value. For an instrument specifically engineered to trade near par, the move marks a decisive breakdown and the deepest discount on record.

STRC is not a common stock. It is a perpetual preferred share issued by Strategy Inc, the company formerly known as MicroStrategy, and it pays a variable cash dividend that currently sits at an 11.50 percent annualized rate. The board adjusts that rate monthly with the stated goal of pulling the market price back toward 100 dollars and damping volatility. The structure worked for most of 2026. STRC held near par from January into May, supported by steady dividend payments and strong retail demand for high yield credit. That stability ended in June.

Three forces drove the decline. First, Bitcoin rolled over. The cryptocurrency dropped to 58,000 dollars this week, its lowest print since October 2024, and that knocked more than 50 percent off Strategy’s common shares in a month. Because STRC’s dividend obligations are ultimately backstopped by the company’s 846,842 bitcoin treasury, weakness in BTC directly pressures confidence in the preferred. Second, cash coverage tightened. Strategy repurchased 1.5 billion dollars of convertible notes earlier this quarter and funded it from its dollar reserve. That cut the company’s cash balance from about 2.25 billion dollars to 871 million dollars. With annual preferred dividend obligations near 1.7 billion dollars, the reserve now covers roughly six months of payments instead of the two year buffer management targeted. Third, retail positioning unraveled. Roughly 80 percent of STRC is held by individual investors, many using margin. When the stock slipped below 90 dollars, forced liquidations accelerated and pushed price into the 70s.

The market impact is immediate. Strategy’s core financing model relies on issuing new STRC shares at or above par through its at the market program and using the proceeds to buy more bitcoin. With STRC now 24 percent under par, that channel is paused. The company disclosed on June 1 that it sold 32 bitcoin for about 2.5 million dollars in late May to fund STRC distributions. It was the first net sale since Strategy began accumulating in 2022 and it rattled a market conditioned to Chairman Michael Saylor’s pledge never to sell.

Analysts remain split on what happens next. Benchmark reiterated a Buy rating on Strategy common stock with a 570 dollar price target, arguing that STRC’s slide is a market driven reset of required yield rather than a structural failure. The firm notes Strategy still holds a 1.4 billion dollar cash reserve and more than 55 billion dollars in bitcoin. Others are less sanguine. Social media chatter compared the decline to a depeg, and Bloomberg Senior ETF Analyst Eric Balchunas publicly suggested the company should retire the instrument, calling it an ongoing thorn for the community.

For investors, the math is simple but stark. At 75.69 dollars, STRC’s 11.50 dollar annual dividend produces an effective yield of 15.2 percent. That compares to roughly 13.1 percent when the stock traded at 88 dollars last week and 11.5 percent at par. The higher yield reflects higher risk. Strategy can suspend preferred dividends without triggering default, and the dividend is not guaranteed. The company has moved to semi monthly payments starting July 15 to reduce reinvestment lag and improve liquidity, but so far that change has not reversed the downtrend.

STRC was designed to be a stable, high yield building block in Strategy’s bitcoin accumulation machine. Trading at 75.69 dollars, it is now the cheapest funding the company has had since the instrument launched in July 2025. Whether that becomes an opportunity or a liability depends on two variables: Bitcoin’s ability to recover from the 58,000 dollar level, and Strategy’s willingness to either raise the dividend again or let the market set a new clearing price. Until one of those happens, the all time low in STRC remains a live stress test for the entire preferred for bitcoin model.
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