Strategy Executes $1.28B Bitcoin Buy, Accelerates STRC Issuance
Michael Saylor's Strategy added approximately 18,700 Bitcoin to its corporate treasury last week at an estimated average entry near $68,500, deploying $1.28 billion in its largest single purchase since early April. The acquisition was partially financed through a $377 million issuance of STRC — the firm's variable-rate preferred share product — alongside roughly $900 million in common stock dilution. Strategy now holds approximately 738,750 BTC, a position currently valued near $50.5 billion at spot prices.
STRC Issuance Hits Second-Highest Single-Week Volume
The $377 million STRC raise is notable for its scale. The only comparable single-disclosure issuance was the product's $2.5 billion debut in July 2024. Strategy has now issued a cumulative $3.8 billion in STRC, which targets a $100 par value and currently pays an annualized variable dividend of 11.5%. The mechanics are straightforward: when STRC trades above par, Strategy treats it as a signal to issue more shares and channel proceeds directly into Bitcoin.
The firm has raised its STRC dividend nine times since the product launched, marketing it as a low-volatility, yield-bearing instrument. However, the growing dividend obligation adds a recurring fixed cost to Strategy's balance sheet — a structural liability that analysts have flagged as a mounting pressure point if Bitcoin prices remain suppressed.
Unrealized Loss Sits at $5.5 Billion
Strategy's blended average cost basis now sits around $75,800 per Bitcoin after the latest purchase brought the average down slightly. With BTC trading near $68,500 on Monday, the firm is carrying an unrealized loss of approximately $5.5 billion across its $56 billion in cumulative Bitcoin expenditure. Despite this, Strategy's stock (MSTR) gained 2.8% to $137 on Monday — though shares remain down roughly 58% over the past six months and well off their highs.
Bitcoin Sale Risk: Market Is Pricing In Low But Non-Zero Probability
Prediction market data adds a layer of nuance. Traders on Myriad currently assign a 14% probability that Strategy sells Bitcoin in 2025 — down from a 35% reading last month on the same platform. While that probability has compressed, it hasn't zeroed out, and any forced liquidation scenario involving Strategy's 738,750 BTC position would represent a material market event.
Impact on BTC Perpetual Futures Markets
Strategy's continued accumulation at scale functions as a structural demand signal for BTC spot markets, which historically exerts upward pressure on perpetual funding rates as long-biased traders pile into leveraged positions anticipating further corporate buying. However, the current setup carries two-sided risk for perp traders.
On the bullish side, the confirmation of another large purchase — Strategy's second-biggest of 2025 — could reinforce positive sentiment and push funding rates higher in the near term, particularly if spot price reacts above key resistance levels. Open interest across BTC perp venues may expand as momentum traders re-enter.
On the bearish side, the $5.5 billion unrealized loss and STRC dividend obligations create a scenario where a prolonged drawdown below $68,000 could trigger forced selling concerns, spiking implied volatility and compressing funding rates sharply. The 14% sell probability priced on prediction markets is not negligible — a sudden narrative shift around Strategy's solvency could catalyze a rapid long squeeze.
Trading Implications
- Funding rates: Expect mild upward pressure on BTC perpetual funding in the short term following confirmation of the $1.28B purchase. Monitor for overextension if funding spikes above 0.05% per 8 hours.
- Liquidation risk: Strategy's $5.5B unrealized loss and STRC obligations create tail risk. A sustained move below $65,000 spot could reignite forced-sell narratives and trigger cascading long liquidations.
- Open interest: Watch for OI expansion on BTC perps as the news circulates. A divergence between rising OI and flat or declining spot price would signal overleveraged longs — a setup prone to flush-outs.
- Volatility positioning: The compression in Strategy's sell probability (35% → 14%) suggests near-term fear has eased, but traders should remain cautious about complacency. Options skew and implied volatility on BTC remain worth monitoring into the week.
- MSTR correlation: MSTR continues to trade as a leveraged BTC proxy. Sharp moves in MSTR relative to BTC spot can serve as an early signal for institutional sentiment shifts in the broader market.