For a company built entirely on the premise of buying Bitcoin with every available dollar, Strategy just did something unusual.
According to an 8-K SEC filing, Strategy raised approximately $467 million in net proceeds through its at-the-market program during the week of July 6-12, and deployed none of it into Bitcoin.
Instead it pushed its total USD reserve to $3 billion, up $450 million from the week prior. The Bitcoin stack stayed unchanged at just under 844,000 BTC, worth roughly $53 billion at current prices.
Why the cash is piling up
The answer sits in Strategy’s balance sheet obligations. The company currently faces roughly $1.76 billion in annual interest and dividend payments tied to its various preferred stock classes, a number that has grown significantly as the company has expanded its capital structure to fund Bitcoin purchases.
Related: Ripple reveals lawyers called the company “done”
Central to the problem is STRC, Strategy’s perpetual preferred stock, which has been trading below par at approximately $87 against a face value of $100 for several weeks.
STRC is Strategy’s preferred funding mechanism. When it trades below par, raising capital through it becomes expensive and signals stress in the credit market’s confidence in the company’s ability to service its obligations.
A few weeks ago, Strategy held roughly $1.4 billion in USD reserves, a level that had traders openly questioning whether the company might eventually be forced to sell Bitcoin to cover its dividend obligations.
That concern became reality when Strategy sold $216 million worth of Bitcoin last week, its first Bitcoin sale since 2022.
The framework behind the buffer
Last month, Strategy announced a Digital Credit Capital Framework, a formal USD reserve policy that includes up to $1 billion in buybacks for its preferred and common stock, and a Bitcoin Monetization Program allowing it to sell up to $1.25 billion of Bitcoin to top up reserves, cover dividends, or fund repurchases.
It also lifted the STRC dividend rate to 12 percent from 11.5 percent to pull the price back toward par.
The $3 billion cash reserve is Saylor extending that runway further. It is not a retreat from the Bitcoin strategy. It is insurance against being forced into a fire sale of the asset that defines it.
This story was originally published by TheStreet on Jul 16, 2026, where it first appeared in the MARKETS section. Add TheStreet as a Preferred Source by clicking here.
