Investors have been concerned since revealed it had sold its first Bitcoin since 2022, 32 Bitcoins. The sale was fairly modest in comparison to the company’s holdings, but it was an attack on the ‘never sell Bitcoin’ policy of the company’s founder, Michael Saylor, and an important wake-up call for investors re-evaluating financing assumptions.
Analysts commented that STRC is not a traditional bond. It doesn’t have a set maturity date, is not secured by collateral, and the dividends may be lowered or terminated by the board. This makes the risk higher than many income-focused investors may have initially expected.
Head of Derivatives Trading at Amina Bank, Andrejica Cobeljic, explained that the recent pullback of Bitcoin was influenced by cyclical weakness, but most importantly, it was a result of fading confidence in Strategy’s model. “The immediate trigger for this leg of Bitcoin’s decline is weakening market cycles, but the deeper underlying force is the erosion of credibility in Strategy’s approach.”
While retail participation continues to cool and institutional demand for Bitcoin slows, the sentiment shift below $60,000 shows that market confidence now depends not only on price action but also on the vitality of Strategy’s financing engine.
