TLDR: Strategy bought 22,337 BTC in one week, its highest single-week purchase since November 2024. STRC, a fixed-income product yielding 11.5%, raised $1.18B inTLDR: Strategy bought 22,337 BTC in one week, its highest single-week purchase since November 2024. STRC, a fixed-income product yielding 11.5%, raised $1.18B in

Saylor’s New Bitcoin Playbook: Is STRC Replacing Share Issuance as Strategy Primary Funding Tool?

2026/03/19 20:17
3 min read
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TLDR:

  • Strategy bought 22,337 BTC in one week, its highest single-week purchase since November 2024.
  • STRC, a fixed-income product yielding 11.5%, raised $1.18B in one week, outpacing MSTR share sales.
  • Saylor raised roughly $4B through STRC, marking a sharp departure from his 2022 bear market approach.
  • Analysts warn that if Bitcoin price drops, STRC dividend payments could become financially unsustainable.

Michael Saylor’s latest Bitcoin acquisitions are turning heads, but not just for their size. Strategy, formerly MicroStrategy, bought 17,994 BTC during the March 8 week and 22,337 BTC the following week.

The second figure marks the highest weekly purchase since November 2024. More than the volume, analysts are focused on the funding mechanism behind these buys.

The shift points to a potentially new playbook for financing large-scale Bitcoin accumulation.

A Fixed-Income Product Is Quietly Replacing Share Issuance

For years, Strategy relied heavily on MSTR share issuance to fund its Bitcoin purchases. That model was straightforward and well understood by the market. The past two weeks, however, suggest something different is taking shape beneath the surface.

CryptoQuant laid out the numbers in a side-by-side comparison of both weeks. During the March 8 week, approximately $900 million came from MSTR share sales while $377 million was raised through STRC.

The following week flipped those proportions entirely, with STRC generating roughly $1.18 billion against $396 million from MSTR shares.

STRC stands for Strategy Fixed Yield, a fixed-income financial product carrying an annual dividend yield of 11.5%. Analysts at The DeFi Report described the approach publicly as “crazy financial engineering.”

The product attracted significant capital during a period when broader crypto markets remained under pressure.

The appeal of STRC lies in its structure. Fixed-income investors who might otherwise avoid Bitcoin exposure can participate through a yield-bearing instrument. That opens a different class of capital to Strategy, one that share issuance alone could not reach.

Saylor raised approximately $4 billion through STRC across these two purchase cycles. That figure alone separates this bear market from his previous ones. In 2022, Strategy’s Bitcoin buys were largely constrained to cash flow from its core software business.

The New Model Carries Real Risk Alongside Its Ambition

The STRC product offers a compelling entry point for fixed-income investors, but it also introduces a structural vulnerability. Bitcoin does not generate yield on its own.

That means the 11.5% dividend must be funded through new capital issuances rather than underlying asset returns.

If Bitcoin’s price falls sharply, STRC could decline in value and lose its appeal to yield-seeking investors. A loss of investor appetite would cut off Strategy’s primary new funding channel at a critical moment. Analysts have flagged this cycle as a key risk worth monitoring closely.

Strategy’s recent purchases have not pushed Bitcoin’s market price higher in any direct way. Instead, the acquisitions appear to be sustaining a layer of institutional confidence that supports retail sentiment. That confidence, however, has its limits if price fails to cooperate.

Bitcoin gained 17% following the escalation of geopolitical tensions involving Iran. Over the same period, NASDAQ dropped 1% and gold fell 4.2%. The divergence strengthened Bitcoin’s short-term positioning as a store of value in some investors’ eyes.

Despite these gains, Bitcoin has yet to clear the $80,000–$85,000 resistance zone. Analysts warn that failure to break through this range could leave the market structurally weak.

That price ceiling will likely determine how long STRC remains a viable tool for Saylor’s accumulation strategy.

The post Saylor’s New Bitcoin Playbook: Is STRC Replacing Share Issuance as Strategy Primary Funding Tool? appeared first on Blockonomi.

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