Michael Saylor says Strategy can sustain its preferred dividends if Bitcoin (BTC) rises more than 3.3% a year over time.
Saylor, Strategy’s founder and executive chairman, highlighted the BTC Breakeven ARR metric in a Jul. 7 post on X, calling it one of the most misunderstood numbers tied to the company.
The measure divides annual preferred dividend obligations by the value of Strategy’s Bitcoin holdings. Those obligations now stand near $1.76B, while the company reports 843,775 BTC worth about $53.8B at a Bitcoin price near $63,603.
“One of the most misunderstood $MSTR metrics is BTC Breakeven ARR. If BTC appreciates faster than 3.3% over time, BTC capital gains can fund $STRC dividends indefinitely,” Saylor wrote.
Strategy, formerly MicroStrategy, also points to a cash buffer of about $2.55B. Its dashboard says that buffer alone could cover roughly 17 months of payments, while the reserve and buffer together could fund about 31 years if Bitcoin showed no growth.
The company has already made 23 consecutive preferred distributions since early 2025. Those payments totaled more than $693M, according to its first-quarter release.
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The argument depends on a simple assumption, that Bitcoin gains can outpace the company’s preferred dividend burden over time. That burden has been rising.
Preferred dividends reached $229.5M in the first quarter of 2026, up from $10.6M a year earlier. Preferred equity outstanding has also climbed above $13.5B, giving skeptics reason to question whether obligations will stay manageable.
JPMorgan has warned that Strategy’s Bitcoin sales policy could create up to $1.25B in sell pressure. On-chain data first pointed to a 491 BTC sale on Jul. 1, but the confirmed sale was later reported as seven times larger.
The market is not treating the structure as risk-free. STRC paid an 11.5% annualized rate in May and still traded below its $100 par target, showing that preferred holders continue to demand compensation for uncertainty.
The 3.3% hurdle looks modest against Bitcoin’s long-term history, but the current backdrop is weaker. Bitcoin is still down nearly 49% from its October peak, making the next dividend periods an early test of whether Strategy relies on gains, cash or more BTC sales.
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