Strategy is famous for turning every spare dollar into bitcoin. So last week's move was a surprise.
It raised $335 million and bought almost no bitcoin.
Mostly Cash, A Little Bitcoin
Strategy sold about 2.7 million of its own shares. That brought in $335.5 million.
Only $35 million of it went to buying bitcoin. That covered 520 coins, at about $67,000 each.
The other $300 million went into the bank. That lifted the firm's cash reserves to $1.4 billion.
For a company built on stacking bitcoin, holding cash is a real shift. The 520-coin buy was tiny by its own past pace.
Strategy often sells new shares to fund its bets. It files a public report each time it buys.
Most weeks, almost all of that cash goes to coins. This week broke the habit.
Each share sale chips away at current owners' stakes. That is the trade-off for buying more bitcoin.
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Why The Cash Pile
The cash is not just sitting there. It backs payments on a slice of Strategy's stock called STRC.
STRC is preferred stock. That is a share that promises a steady payout.
It works almost like interest on a bond. Lately, those investors have grown nervous.
They worry the payouts may not be safe. That fear boiled over last Thursday.
Panic selling drove STRC to a record low under $83. That was its lowest price ever.
It is meant to trade near $100. The cash reserve started on December 1, 2025.
Strategy set it up to cover dividends and debt. The firm plans to keep refilling it over time.
Saylor has leaned on preferred stock to raise money. Those payouts are now a bill he must cover.
The bigger reserve is meant to reassure those investors.
The Stock Bounced Back
The mood shifted fast. STRC climbed back to about $90 by Monday.
That is still short of where Saylor wants it. He had hoped to pin the price near $100.
Strategy's main stock rose 3.5% on Monday too. It got a lift from bitcoin, which bounced close to $65,000.
In all, the firm now holds 847,363 bitcoin. It paid around $64 billion for that stack over the years.
That works out to about $75,000 a coin. It still owns more bitcoin than any other public company.
The firm has bought bitcoin for years, week after week. A bigger cash pile now makes its payouts easier to meet.
Worth Noting
Raising cash to calm nervous investors is a defensive move. It is not the act of a firm on offense.
This time, Strategy chose safety over more coins. Bitcoin's recent slide is what put STRC holders on edge.
The scare changed the math for Saylor. For one week, safety beat stacking.
The shift shows how much the preferred stock matters now. Last week, the bitcoin king guarded the castle instead of building onto it.
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