As part of its corporate Bitcoin treasury strategy, Strategy is looking into other methods to borrow debt and equity in order to keep stacking Bitcoin.
Prior to announcing more Bitcoin BTC$84,202 purchases, Strategy has revealed the price of its most recent round of perpetual preferred shares.
Strategy estimates that the business will make around $711 million from the sale of the most recent round of preferred stock, which will be offered for $85 per share with a 10% yield.
The current offering’s annual 11.8% payout to investors, according to market expert Jesse Myers, indicates that Strategy may now lure investors away from the bond market, which only yields 4.2% interest.
On March 17, Strategy bought 130 Bitcoin, which was worth around $10.7 million. This brought the company’s total holdings to 499,226 Bitcoin, which is worth $41.8 billion.
Following a three-week lull in purchases, the March 17 transaction was the company’s lowest purchase to date. Michael Saylor, a co-founder of Strategy, has hinted that the business may increase its debt and sell additional stock in order to fund its Bitcoin holdings.
Strategy’s 2025 Bitcoin acquisitions to date. SaylorTracker is the source.
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In an effort to generate an extra $21 billion to purchase more Bitcoin, Strategy said on March 10 that it would occasionally sell shares of its 8% Series A perpetual strike preferred stock.
In order to acquire further money, the business announced a tranche of 5 million shares of Series A perpetual preferred stock on March 18.
According to data from SaylorTracker, despite the current market decline, the corporation is still up over 26% overall on its investment and has over $8.6 billion in unrealized profits.
Shares of Strategy, however, fell more than 44% from the all-time high of around $543 on November 21 and more than 26% in early March after reaching their peak in January 2025.
From the previous low of $231 on March 11, Strategy’s shares are now trading at over $299, up 29%.
In addition to bringing in new cash, the company’s participation in the Nasdaq 100, a weighted stock index that measures the top 100 businesses by market capitalization on the tech-focused stock exchange, also made it vulnerable to more general declines in the tech sector.
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