- Strategy (MSTR) bought 487 BTC for $49.9M, bringing total holdings to about 641,692 bitcoin worth over $68B.
- The buy was funded through at-the-market offerings of its high-yield Stretch (STRC) and Strife (STRF) preferred shares, with STRC now paying a 10.5% annualized dividend.
- MSTR’s premium to its bitcoin holdings has largely vanished, but bottoming signs are emerging as shorts close and the stock bounces alongside BTC.
Strategy (MSTR), the largest corporate holder of bitcoin, quietly added another 487 BTC last week, spending about $49.9 million. That brings its total stash to roughly 641,692 bitcoin, worth more than $68 billion at current prices.

It’s the latest in a series of smaller, incremental buys rather than the blockbuster purchases the company was known for in earlier cycles. With MSTR’s common stock under heavy pressure and its once-massive premium to net bitcoin holdings largely erased, raising fresh capital has become trickier — but clearly not impossible.
Stretch and Strife: New Playbook for Funding the BTC War Chest
What makes this purchase stand out is how Strategy chose to fund it. For the first time, the company tapped its at-the-market (ATM) program for its short-duration, high-yield preferred series, Stretch (STRC), raising about $26.2 million. Strategy recently bumped STRC’s annualized dividend to 10.5%, paid monthly, turning it into a chunky income product for investors willing to back the BTC treasury strategy.
The rest of the funds came from the ATM program tied to another preferred series, Strife (STRF). Together, Stretch and Strife are starting to look like the new backbone of Strategy’s capital structure: income-heavy preferreds on one side, ultra-volatile bitcoin exposure on the other. It’s a pretty aggressive mix, but on-brand for a company that has essentially turned itself into a leveraged bitcoin vehicle.
Market Sentiment: Premium Gone, But Bottoming Signs Emerge
Strategy’s common shares have taken a beating alongside bitcoin’s recent downside. The stock has not only tracked BTC lower, but also seen its previous “extra” premium to the underlying holdings wiped out. Months ago, short seller Jim Chanos called out that premium as irrational and famously positioned short MSTR versus long BTC.
Over the weekend, Chanos said he has closed that trade — a sign the easy downside may be over. At the same time, The Wall Street Journal finally ran a piece on the collapse in digital asset treasury companies, quoting a trader saying, “You are just paying $2 for a one-dollar bill… Eventually those premiums will compress.” The irony, of course, is that they already have. That kind of late-cycle skepticism showing up in mainstream coverage is exactly the sort of thing contrarians watch for.
With bitcoin back above $106,000 over the weekend, MSTR shares were up about 3.2% in premarket trading. It’s not a full-on reversal yet, but it is a hint that the stock may be trying to carve out a bottom as BTC stabilizes.
Strategy’s Thesis: Keep Buying, Even in the Pain
The core message from this latest move is simple: Strategy is still committed to its bitcoin-first treasury model, even under tougher conditions. Instead of pausing or derisking, the company is doubling down with a mix of creative financing, high-yield preferreds, and continued accumulation on dips.
Whether that proves brilliant or reckless will depend almost entirely on where bitcoin trades in the next few years. For now, the company has shown it can still raise capital, still buy BTC, and still attract investors willing to accept 10.5% yield in exchange for indirect exposure to its long-term crypto bet.

What Comes Next for MSTR and BTC?
If bitcoin keeps grinding higher from here, Strategy’s compressed premium and beaten-up common shares could turn into a leveraged upside vehicle once again. If BTC stalls or breaks lower, the weight of high-yield preferred obligations plus a massive mark-to-market treasury could make the ride even rougher.
Either way, this latest 487 BTC purchase proves one thing: the Strategy playbook hasn’t changed. It’s still “raise, buy, hold,” just with more sophisticated funding tools and far less room for error.











