
In brief
- Shares of Strategy snapped a nine-day losing streak, paring monthly losses on the back of a capital management framework.
- The Bitcoin-buying firm’s flagship preferred stock recovered losses after falling to record lows last week.
- An analyst described Strategy’s framework as a “point-by-point answer” to investor concerns.
Shares of Strategy (MSTR) snapped a nine-day losing streak on Monday, rebounding after the Bitcoin-buying firm unveiled a new framework for managing its capital.
The company’s stock popped 12.6% to $92.68, paring monthly losses after Strategy signaled future liquidations of the digital asset would be formulaic, according to Yahoo Finance.
Although Strategy typically starts the week by announcing how much Bitcoin it has recently bought, the firm instead told investors that its so-called USD Reserve had expanded to $2.55 billion, while drawing attention to a “BTC Monetization Program.”
Moving forward, the company indicated that it could generate $1.25 billion in proceeds for its cash cushion by selling Bitcoin, providing it with additional resources to manage dividends and debt. Analysts had previously warned that Strategy’s cash reserves had worn thin.
Meanwhile, Strategy said it may occasionally repurchase common and preferred shares to capitalize on “market dislocations.” What’s more, the company would only issue common shares when the company is valued at a premium relative to its enterprise value.
In the announcement, Strategy Executive Chairman and co-founder Michael Saylor also said that the dividend for Stretch (STRC) had been raised an eighth time, putting it on track to offer 12% annually across distributions that are made twice a month.
STRC rose 12.2% to $83.67, according to Yahoo Finance. Last week, the product fell as low as $71.25, drifting far below the $100 par value at which it is designed to trade. When the product trades at or above that threshold, Strategy issues more of it to purchase Bitcoin.
In a note shared by Mark Palmer, managing director and senior research analyst at Benchmark-StoneX, he described Strategy’s framework as “robust,” while reiterating a “Buy” rating and $570 price target.
“The upshot is that Strategy is now an active manager of both sides of its capital structure, an approach that we view as a significant positive for its shareholders,” Palmer wrote, calling the framework a “direct, point-by-point answer to the concerns investors have been voicing.”
On Monday, Bitcoin changed hands around $60,200, a 1.1% increase over the past day, according to CoinGecko. The digital asset fell as low as $58,200 last week as the sell-off surrounding STRC and Strategy’s common stock intensified.
Strategy’s framework brought clarity to the conditions under which the digital asset could be sold in the future—and to what extent. Still, the company’s shares remained down nearly 42% from $149.93 over the past month, around the time it sold 32 Bitcoin for $2.5 million, marking its first sale since 2022.
Meanwhile, the firm’s Bitcoin stockpile stood unchanged at 847,363 Bitcoin. Valued at $51 billion, the company’s stockpile showed around $13.1 billion in unrealized losses.
On Myriad, a prediction market owned by Decrypt parent company Dastan, traders foresaw a 15% chance that Strategy would hold more than 1 million Bitcoin before year’s end. That marked a slight improvement from 14.5% odds a week ago.
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