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1Published: June 29, 2026 | Source: Strategy Inc. Press Release
If you’ve been following the world of Bitcoin and big companies, you’ve probably heard of Strategy (formerly MicroStrategy). They’re famous for owning more Bitcoin than almost anyone else on the planet.
Today, Strategy just announced something big — a brand-new master plan called the Digital Credit Capital Framework. It’s basically a five-part playbook for how they’re going to manage all the fancy financial tools they’ve created, protect their Bitcoin treasure chest, and make sure everything runs smoothly for years to come.
Let’s break it down — no finance degree required!
Imagine you’re building a really tall LEGO tower. You need a solid base so it doesn’t fall over, right? That’s exactly what Strategy is doing with this framework.
Their main goals are:
Michael Saylor, the company’s founder, put it best:
"Strategy remains committed to Bitcoin as its primary treasury reserve asset. At the same time, Digital Credit requires liquidity, discipline, and active capital management."
In plain English: They love Bitcoin, but they also need cash to pay the bills. This plan helps them do both.
The framework is built on five major components:
Let’s dig into each one!
Think of this as Strategy’s emergency piggy bank. It’s a big stash of regular dollars (not Bitcoin!) set aside for one very specific job: paying dividends to preferred stockholders and interest on their debts.
| Detail | Value |
|---|---|
| Current USD Reserve | ~$2.55 billion |
| Annual dividend + interest bills | ~$1.76 billion |
| Months of coverage (cash only) | ~17.4 months |
| Minimum reserve requirement | 12 months |
| Total coverage (cash + BTC monetization) | ~$3.80 billion (~25.9 months) |
Important: This cash is NOT used to buy back stock. That’s funded separately through Bitcoin sales.
STRC stands for Variable Rate Series A Perpetual Stretch Preferred Stock. Yeah, that’s a mouthful! Think of it like this:
Preferred stock is a type of investment that’s kind of a hybrid between a stock and a bond. Holders get regular payments (like interest on a bond), and the stock has a "stated value" — kind of like face value.
STRC is one of Strategy’s most popular financial products with investors.
Effective July 1, 2026:
Strategy’s goal is for STRC to trade at around $99 to $100 per share — close to its $100 stated value. If the stock trades too far below that, it can worry investors. By adjusting the dividend rate, they can influence demand and trading prices.
Important: Strategy cannot guarantee that STRC will trade in that $99–$100 range. The stock could trade significantly lower. Dividends are also not guaranteed — they must be declared by the Board.
They also made it clear: Just because STRC trades below $100 doesn’t automatically mean they’ll raise the dividend. They have many tools — the dividend is just one of them.
When a company buys back its own stock from the open market. Think of it like this: if you gave out slices of pizza but then decided to buy some back because there were too many slices and not enough hungry people.
| Detail | Value |
|---|---|
| Maximum authorization | $1.0 billion |
| Eligible securities | STRC, STRF, STRD, and STRK |
| Initial priority | STRC (if management thinks it makes financial sense) |
STRF = 10.00% Series A Perpetual Strife Preferred Stock
STRD = 10.00% Series A Perpetual Stride Preferred Stock
STRK = 8.00% Series A Perpetual Strike Preferred Stock
Important: These repurchases are NOT funded from the USD Reserve! They’ll be funded through Bitcoin sales under the BTC Monetization Program.
Strategy is also setting aside $1.0 billion to buy back its regular common stock (the MSTR shares you might see trading on the stock market).
| Detail | Value |
|---|---|
| Maximum authorization | $1.0 billion |
| Method | Same flexible approaches as the Digital Credit program |
| Funding source | BTC Monetization Program (NOT the USD Reserve) |
When management believes the stock is trading below what the company is actually worth ("intrinsic value"), buying back shares is like getting a bargain. You’re essentially buying a dollar for 80 cents.
Important: Like the preferred stock buybacks, this is funded through Bitcoin sales, not the USD Reserve.
The BTC Monetization Program is the strategy Strategy uses to sell Bitcoin when they need to. It’s like having a savings account you can tap into — but the account is full of Bitcoin.
The Board has authorized three specific purposes:
Important: Selling Bitcoin for anything else or beyond these limits requires additional Board authorization. They’re not just randomly selling Bitcoin — every sale has to fit within this plan.
Andrew Kang, Strategy’s CFO, summed it up:
"Bitcoin is capital. This program gives Strategy the flexibility to use a portion of its BTC Reserve to strengthen Digital Credit, fund or replenish the USD Reserve, fund dividend payments and interest expense, and fund accretive repurchases when BTC monetization is more advantageous than issuing common equity."
In other words: Bitcoin isn’t just a trophy on the shelf — it’s a working financial tool that helps fund the whole operation.
With $2.55 billion in cash plus $1.25 billion in authorized BTC monetization capacity, Strategy has about 25.9 months of dividend/interest coverage — a very comfortable cushion.
Strategy also promised to be careful and disciplined about issuing new common stock. Especially when their share price is around 1x mNAV (multiple of Net Asset Value) — basically when the stock price roughly matches what the company holds in assets per share.
What’s mNAV? Think of it as "what’s the company actually worth per share when you count everything it owns?" If the stock trades at 1x mNAV or higher, it might be a good time to issue new shares. If it trades below, they’d be selling themselves short — so they’ll wait.
For the full definition of mNAV as used by Strategy, you can visit: strategy.com/notes
Phong Le, Strategy’s CEO, captured the whole philosophy:
"Strategy is evolving from one-way capital issuance to active capital management. We intend to move between issuing securities when capital is attractive and repurchasing securities when our instruments trade at levels that make buybacks accretive."
Translation: Strategy used to just raise money in one direction (issuing new stock). Now they’re learning to flex — raising money when it’s cheap to do so, and buying back their own stuff when it’s on sale. It’s like having a two-way street instead of a one-way road.
| What | Why It Matters |
|---|---|
| Digital Credit Capital Framework | A new master plan for financial stability |
| $2.55B USD Reserve | Cash safety net for dividends & interest (~17.4 months coverage) |
| $25.9 months total coverage | With both cash + $1.25B BTC monetization capacity |
| STRC dividend increased to 12% | A popular preferred stock gets juicier payments |
| $1B preferred stock buyback | Strategy can buy back its own stock when cheap |
| $1B common stock buyback | Protecting shareholder value when shares are underpriced |
| $1.25B BTC monetization | Smart Bitcoin sales to fund the above — without using the cash reserve |
Q: Is Strategy selling all its Bitcoin?
Absolutely not! Strategy remains deeply committed to Bitcoin as its primary reserve asset. The BTC Monetization Program is limited to $1.25 billion in authorized sales for specific purposes. That’s a small fraction of their holdings. Bitcoin is still the centerpiece of their strategy.
Q: Why is Strategy raising the STRC dividend to 12%?
Strategy wants STRC to trade close to $100 per share (its stated value). By increasing the dividend, they’re making the stock more attractive to investors, which can help push the price upward. They’ll review this rate monthly and adjust as needed.
Q: Will Strategy definitely buy back $1 billion in stock?
No! Both repurchase programs are authorizations, not obligations. Strategy might not buy back any stock at all. They’ll only do it when management believes it makes financial sense — for example, when the stock is trading at a meaningful discount.
Q: Who pays for the stock buybacks?
Not the USD Reserve. The buybacks are funded through Bitcoin sales under the BTC Monetization Program. The USD Reserve is exclusively for paying preferred dividends and debt interest — and that money is protected by Board policy.
Q: Should I be worried about the forward-looking statements?
It’s always smart to read the fine print! Strategy includes forward-looking statements (predictions and plans) that are subject to real risks — including Bitcoin price swings, market volatility, regulatory changes, and more. These aren’t guarantees; they’re educated projections. As with any investment decision, do your own homework.
Strategy Inc. | Tysons Corner, Virginia | June 29, 2026
Contact: ir@strategy.com