Bitcoin’s slide below $64,000 has pushed Strategy, the largest corporate Bitcoin holder in the world, into an $11.2 billion unrealized loss on its holdings.
The company holds 843,706 Bitcoin, bought at an average price of $75,699 per coin. That gives Strategy a total cost basis of $63.8 billion. With Bitcoin trading around $63,000 to $64,000 at the time of reporting, the current value of those holdings sits at roughly $52.6 billion.
Bitcoin is down about 4.7% in the last 24 hours, 13.8% over the past week, and more than 20% in the past month.
Bitcoin (BTC) Price
Strategy co-founder Michael Saylor posted on X saying the pressure on Bitcoin is coming from ETF outflows and a surge in capital going into AI infrastructure. Spot Bitcoin ETFs have seen $4.4 billion in outflows over the last 13 trading days.
His comments came days after Strategy sold 32 Bitcoin — its first Bitcoin sale since 2022. That sale drew fresh attention to the company’s leveraged business model and its ability to keep buying Bitcoin.
Strategy’s variable-rate preferred stock, STRC, has fallen to around $94–95, below its intended $100 par value.
The stock was designed to trade near $100 with an 11.5% dividend. When it drops below that level, the company is pressured to raise its dividend to attract buyers back. That means higher cash flow obligations for the company.
Grayscale Research head Zach Pandl said Strategy will likely need to sell more Bitcoin in the future to meet those obligations. He also said Strategy’s ability to buy more Bitcoin is limited at current prices for both MSTR stock and STRC.
Strategy’s main stock, MSTR, was down around 1.5% in pre-market trading at $124.70 at the time of reporting.
Some analysts, including investor Scott Melker, downplayed the STRC drop, saying a 5% discount to par is normal behavior for preferred stock in uncertain markets.
Gold investor Peter Schiff took the opposite view. He argued that a continued fall in STRC would force Strategy to increase dividend payments and eventually accelerate Bitcoin sales to cover those costs.
Grayscale noted that while this near-term pressure may weigh on Bitcoin, it could be a positive long-term shift. Moving Bitcoin off leveraged corporate balance sheets and into more diversified corporate treasuries may support a stronger recovery.
Standard Chartered maintained its year-end Bitcoin price target of $100,000. The bank said a potential market bottom may be forming, and that a new Bitcoin purchase by Strategy — whether 320 BTC or 3,200 BTC — could confirm that the low is in.
After Strategy’s tax-loss sale of 704 Bitcoin in 2022, the company bought 810 Bitcoin just two days later.
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