OverviewStrategy's common stock broke below $100 on June 24 for the first time since March 2024, touching an intraday low near $92 and trading at roughly two-thirds of the net asset value of the BitcoOverviewStrategy's common stock broke below $100 on June 24 for the first time since March 2024, touching an intraday low near $92 and trading at roughly two-thirds of the net asset value of the Bitco

The Day MSTR Traded Below Its Own Bitcoin: STRC's Broken Peg and the Reflexive Risk Loop Inside Strategy

Overview

Strategy's common stock broke below $100 on June 24 for the first time since March 2024, touching an intraday low near $92 and trading at roughly two-thirds of the net asset value of the Bitcoin sitting on its own balance sheet. With 847,363 BTC worth about $52 billion against an equity market capitalization near $34 billion, MSTR now trades at a diluted mNAV below 1.0, the market is pricing the wrapper at a discount to the coins inside it, a condition that did not exist through any prior drawdown in the company's history.
The fault line running underneath that discount is STRC, the perpetual preferred instrument known as Stretch, which was engineered to hold a $100 par value and instead printed an all-time low of $79.85 on the same session. This piece dissects why a token sale broke the funding engine, how the reflexive loop between BTC, MSTR, and STRC actually transmits stress, and where the genuine multi-quarter risk sits once the margin-call myth is set aside.
 

 

1. The Architecture: How a Premium Machine Became a Discount Trap

For five years the model worked in one direction, Strategy issued low-coupon convertible notes and, later a stack of perpetual preferred instruments, used the proceeds to acquire spot Bitcoin, and wrapped the whole position in an equity that traded at a premium to its net asset value, because investors were willing to pay above NAV for leveraged, fee-free, institutionally accessible Bitcoin exposure that they could hold in a standard brokerage account. The premium was the entire engine, since a stock trading above the value of its underlying coins can issue new shares, convert that equity into more Bitcoin per share, and compound the holding without diluting existing holders in NAV terms; the accretive flywheel that defined the company through 2024 and most of 2025.
Reflexivity does not respect direction though, and the same leverage that amplified the upside is now amplifying the descent, because when spot Bitcoin falls the embedded leverage in the capital structure pushes the equity down faster than the coin, which is precisely what the tape showed on June 24 as MSTR fell more than 9% against a Bitcoin decline nearer 2–3%. The mechanism that converted a premium into a discount is the collapse of the narrative that justified the premium in the first place, and once MSTR slipped beneath the spot value of its own treasury, the arbitrage desks that historically bought the discount found themselves staring at a stock that could keep getting cheaper regardless of where Bitcoin traded, which is why the on-chain and flow data show large buyers sitting out even as short-term traders defend the $104 zone.
 

2. The STRC Fracture: Where the Real Break Happened

 

 
The common stock is the symptom; STRC is the structural crack. Stretch is a variable-rate perpetual preferred designed to trade around a $100 par value, with a dividend rate adjusted monthly currently 11.50% annualized, paid semi-monthly specifically to pull the price back toward par whenever it drifts. The mechanism stopped working, STRC has not traded at par since mid-May, closed at $89 on June 18 for a record low at the time, and then broke further to an all-time low of $79.85 on June 24, which at that price lifts the effective yield above 14%—a level that, against a risk-free rate under 4%, signals the market is pricing genuine distress into the instrument rather than a routine yield reset.
The break carries a direct operational consequence that separates it from ordinary price noise, because Strategy issues new STRC shares through an at-the-market program only when the security trades above its $100 par, using the cash raised to buy Bitcoin, which means that with STRC stuck below par the company has paused that ATM program entirely and switched off one of the primary levers it relies on to keep accumulating. The funding engine has stalled. What deepened the loss of confidence was the sequence of events that triggered the de-peg: Strategy disclosed on June 1 that it had sold 32 Bitcoin in late May at an average near $77,135, roughly $2.5 million, with proceeds earmarked for STRC distributions, and although that sale represented about 0.004% of the company's holdings and several analysts including TD Cowen's Lance Vitanza called the reduction immaterial, the symbolism detonated a "never sell" narrative that had underpinned the entire investor base.
Saylor framed the move deliberately, having said on the Q1 earnings call that the company would "probably sell some bitcoin to pay a dividend just to inoculate the market and send the message that we did it," a calculated attempt to demonstrate the process before it became forced. Crypto economist Alex Kruger described the sequence as cornered execution, arguing Saylor signaled willingness to sell and cratered STRC in the process; the instrument has not reclaimed par since.
 

3. The Margin-Call Myth: Reading the Actual Debt Structure

The fear driving the broader Bitcoin selloff rests on an assumption that a falling MSTR triggers a catastrophic corporate margin call, forcing Strategy to dump 847,363 BTC onto the spot market, and that assumption does not survive contact with the actual balance sheet. Bitcoin was acquired largely through senior convertible notes rather than collateralized bank margin loans, and those notes carry fixed maturities stretching across the decade with nominal coupons, structured so that bondholders cannot trigger an automated, programmatic liquidation of the treasury based on short-term spot price moves. There is no algorithmic switch that sells the core stack at $92 a share.
The preferred instruments reinforce that conclusion rather than undermining it, because STRC, STRF, STRK, STRD, and STRE are explicitly not collateralized by the company's Bitcoin and hold only a preferred claim on residual assets; they cannot seize coins, they only sit ahead of common equity in the capital stack. The treasury was engineered to survive exactly this kind of volatility
 

4. The Real Risk: Dividend Coverage and the Slow Squeeze

The threat is not a margin call but a multi-quarter cash-flow vise, because the convertible notes still require cash to service their coupons and the preferred stack now carries dividend obligations that have grown into a material annual liability. CryptoQuant's Julio Moreno estimated annualized dividend commitments near $1.2 billion and calculated that dividend coverage had compressed from more than seven years to roughly 14 months, suggesting Strategy would need about $2.8 billion in reserves to restore 24 months of coverage; a gap that becomes harder to close precisely when Bitcoin is depressed and the equity and preferred markets are least willing to fund it cheaply.
The legacy enterprise software business throws off positive but relatively flat cash flow that cannot independently cover obligations of that size, which leaves three levers, each with a cost. Selling common stock at a discount to NAV is dilutive and non-accretive, the scenario Arca's Jeff Dorman assigns the highest probability and describes as a slow bleed that keeps Bitcoin intact while hammering the equity. Selling Bitcoin directly—Dorman's lower-probability but more drastic path, sized at $3–4 billion would buy coverage and support STRC while pressuring spot in the near term. Cutting or suspending preferred dividends would breach the implicit promise that sold the instruments in the first place. None of these is a default, but each tightens the same vise, and the market is now pricing the probability distribution across them rather than any single outcome.
The reflexive panic compounds the mechanical pressure independently of what Saylor actually does, because the mere perception that Strategy is structurally vulnerable invites traders to front-run the downside by shorting spot Bitcoin as a hedge against MSTR fragility, which drives the coin lower, expands the unrealized loss, pressures STRC further, and feeds the next leg of the equity decline—a self-referential loop in which the fear of forced selling produces the price action that would eventually justify it.
 

5. Conclusion

The episode is a precise demonstration of how corporate leverage behaves when it is wrapped around the most volatile major asset class, and the breakage was not in the Bitcoin itself but in the financial architecture built on top of it; the broken STRC peg, the paused ATM, and the discount to NAV are all structural cracks in the wrapper rather than failures of the underlying coin. Bitcoin carries no debt, no covenants, and no solvency risk; the equity and preferred instruments engineered to deliver leveraged exposure to it carry all three. With Strategy's average cost basis near $66,384 per coin on the older accounting and higher on filing-based figures, the treasury sits underwater on paper to the tune of roughly $10 billion at current prices, and as long as MSTR trades beneath the net asset value of its holdings the reflexive loop will keep transmitting stress between the three instruments. Saylor remains structurally and temperamentally aligned against willing capitulation of the core stack, but he has already shown the market that the "never sell" line was a preference rather than a constraint, and the market is no longer pricing Bitcoin alone, it is pricing the durability of the largest corporate Bitcoin treasury ever assembled.

 

FAQ

Why did MSTR stock fall below $100? 
MSTR broke below $100 on June 24, 2026; its first time under that level since March 2024; driven by a falling Bitcoin price, the broken peg on its STRC preferred stock, and eroding confidence in the capital-raising model that funds its Bitcoin purchases. It touched an intraday low near $92.
What does it mean that MSTR trades below its Bitcoin NAV?
Strategy's roughly 847,363 BTC are worth about $52 billion, while its equity market cap sits near $34 billion, putting its mNAV below 1.0. The market is valuing the equity wrapper at a discount to the coins it holds
Has Strategy actually sold any Bitcoin? 
Yes. Strategy disclosed on June 1, 2026 that it sold 32 BTC in late May at an average near $77,135 (about $2.5 million) to fund STRC dividends; its first sale since it began accumulating in 2022. The amount was tiny (~0.004% of holdings), but it broke the company's "never sell" narrative.
What is STRC and why did its peg break? 
STRC, or Stretch, is a variable-rate perpetual preferred stock engineered to trade near a $100 par value, paying an 11.50% annualized dividend adjusted monthly. It fell to an all-time low of $79.85 on June 24, lifting its effective yield above 14%, after the Bitcoin sale and dividend mechanics undermined confidence and yield traders rotated to rival treasury preferreds.
Will Strategy be forced to sell its Bitcoin in a margin call? 
A programmatic margin call is unlikely at current prices. The Bitcoin was bought mainly through senior convertible notes with fixed maturities, not collateralized margin loans, and the preferred instruments are explicitly not backed by the Bitcoin. There is no automated trigger that liquidates the treasury based on the share price.
What is the real risk to Strategy then? 
Multi-quarter dividend and debt-service pressure. Annualized preferred dividend obligations are estimated near $1.2 billion, and coverage has reportedly compressed from over seven years to roughly 14 months. The company may be pushed toward dilutive stock sales, a larger Bitcoin sale ($3–4 billion in one analyst scenario), or dividend cuts
How does this loop affect Bitcoin's price? 
Reflexively. Perceived fragility prompts traders to short spot Bitcoin as a hedge against MSTR, which pushes BTC lower, widens Strategy's unrealized loss, pressures STRC further, and drives the next leg of the equity decline—a self-reinforcing cycle independent of whether Saylor sells.
Is Michael Saylor going to keep selling? 
Saylor has framed the small sale as a deliberate move to "inoculate the market" and test the process rather than a strategic exit, and he remains aligned against willingly liquidating the core treasury. The pressure point is dividend coverage: if Bitcoin stays depressed, escalating small sales or a larger one become more likely regardless of intent.
 
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial, investment, or trading advice. Digital assets are volatile and you may lose capital. Conduct your own research before making any decision.
Market Opportunity
4 Logo
4 Price(4)
--
----
USD
4 (4) Live Price Chart

Description:Crypto Pulse is powered by AI and public sources to bring you the hottest token trends instantly. For expert insights and in-depth analysis, visit MEXC Learn.

The articles shared on this page are sourced from public platforms and are provided for reference only. They do not represent the position or views of MEXC. All rights belong to Emmanuel Olamiye. If you believe any content infringes upon the rights of a third party, please contact [email protected] for prompt removal. MEXC does not guarantee the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of any content and is not responsible for any actions taken based on the information provided. The content does not constitute financial, legal, or other professional advice, nor should it be interpreted as a recommendation or endorsement by MEXC. For expert insights and in-depth analysis, visit MEXC Learn.