Strategy’s 717,131 BTC gamble hinges on 2027’s dilution pressure


Strategy (formerly MicroStrategy) has become the public market’s most widely traded Bitcoin proxy, using equity, convertible notes, and preferred stock to build a balance sheet dominated by the top crypto.

However, as Bitcoin trades near $68,000 and Strategy shares hover below $130, investors are paying closer attention to the mechanisms that allow the company to continue buying BTC without becoming a forced seller.

Industry experts such as Bloomberg Intelligence strategist Mike McGlone have warned that Bitcoin could decline to $10,000.

While this drawdown scenario presents challenges for the firm, the Michael Saylor-led firm appears confident in its ability to navigate these issues even if BTC falls to $8,000.

MicroStrategy Strategy
Strategy Claims Converts are Fully Covered (Source: Strategy)

However, it is a calendar date and a stock price level that raise more serious concerns.

Holders of Strategy’s $1.01 billion convertible notes due 2028 can require the company to repurchase the notes for cash on Sept. 15, 2027, a feature that becomes more threatening when the stock trades below the notes’ initial conversion price of about $183.19 a share.

For years, Strategy benefited from a market structure in which many investors could not easily buy spot Bitcoin in a US ETF wrapper.

That dynamic helped support periods when the stock traded at a premium to the implied value of its Bitcoin holdings per share, a cushion that made new fundraising less expensive.

With spot Bitcoin ETFs now established, that premium has been harder to sustain, and the company’s reliance on issuing shares to fund its strategy becomes more visible.

Strategy’s own dashboard underscores how quickly the equity base has expanded. As of Feb. 16, the company reported 333.755 million basic shares outstanding and 366.114 million assumed diluted shares, and held 717,131 Bitcoin.

Those figures provide the market’s simplest way to track the trade-off between accumulating Bitcoin and spreading the claim across more shares.

The 2027 put

Convertible debt is often described as “cheap” funding because the coupon is low.

Strategy’s 2028 converts pay 0.625% interest, but the risk investors are focusing on is not coupon pressure. It occurs when the equity option embedded in the notes is never exercised.

The notes mature on Sept. 15, 2028, but the put date arrives a year earlier.

If Strategy’s stock is comfortably above $183.19 as Sept. 15, 2027, approaches, noteholders have a stronger incentive to convert into equity, or at least less incentive to demand cash, because the conversion feature has value.

However, if the stock is below $183.19, demanding cash becomes more appealing, and the company needs a plan to meet roughly $1 billion in a market that may be unwilling to fund Bitcoin-linked leverage on generous terms.

Strategy’s dashboard shows why that conversion price has become a reference point. The company lists the assumed share impact of each convertible series, including the 2028 notes, which are tied to $183.19.

Strategy DebtsStrategy Debts
Strategy Debts (Source: Strategy)

This is not just an accounting table. It is a map of incentives that turns one stock price level into a de facto stress threshold.

The company has argued publicly that even severe Bitcoin drawdowns do not automatically translate into insolvency because the balance sheet includes substantial assets.

But the market’s more immediate concern is not bankruptcy math. It is the set of financing choices that protect the Bitcoin position while shifting costs onto common shareholders through dilution, especially when the stock is weak.

Equity issuance as the pressure valve

Strategy’s recent capital-raising demonstrates how central equity issuance has become.

In its fourth-quarter 2025 results, the company reported raising approximately $5.6 billion in gross proceeds during the quarter and an additional $3.9 billion between Jan. 1 and Feb. 1, 2026. Most of that came from selling common stock through its at-the-market program.

The company reported selling 24,769,210 shares for approximately $4.4 billion in the fourth quarter and another 20,205,642 shares for $3.4 billion in January, with $8.1 billion remaining under the common ATM as of Feb. 1.

That pace matters because dilution is not an abstract risk. It is the operating method. When the stock trades lower, each additional dollar raised requires issuing more shares, permanently diluting the per-share claim on the Bitcoin holdings that investors believe they are buying exposure to.

Strategy’s basic share count rose to 333.755 million by Feb. 16, up from 312.062 million at year-end 2025, according to its dashboard.

This is the core tension for common shareholders. The company has positioned its approach as maximizing “Bitcoin per share” over time.

But in the short run, dilution can outpace perceived gains if capital must be raised under weak conditions, or if the stock’s premium to the implied Bitcoin value compresses and remains compressed.

Strategy’s cash reserve trade-off

There is a direct counterargument to the 2027 alarm. Strategy has built liquidity and outlined a reserve policy that, on paper, could cover a cash repurchase without selling Bitcoin.

The company reported $2.3 billion in cash and cash equivalents as of Dec. 31, 2025, and said the increase from the prior year reflected the establishment of a $2.25 billion “USD Reserve.”

The company stated that the reserve was designed to cover 2.5 years of preferred dividends and debt interest, and that it was funded with proceeds from the sale of common stock through the ATM.

Strategy also stated that its current intention is to maintain the reserve at a level sufficient to fund two to three years of those payments, while reserving the right to adjust it based on market conditions and liquidity needs.

In practice, using the reserve to cover a Sept. 2027 cash put would merely shift the problem rather than resolve it.

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