• Send Us A Tip
  • Calling all Tech Writers
  • Advertise
Monday, June 22, 2026
  • Login
TechStory
  • News
  • Crypto
  • Gadgets
  • Memes
  • Gaming
  • Cars
  • AI
  • Startups
  • Markets
  • How to
No Result
View All Result
  • News
  • Crypto
  • Gadgets
  • Memes
  • Gaming
  • Cars
  • AI
  • Startups
  • Markets
  • How to
No Result
View All Result
TechStory
No Result
View All Result
Home Crypto Bitcoin

Strategy’s $689 Million Annual Bill

by Anindya Paul
November 6, 2025
in Bitcoin, Crypto
Reading Time: 3 mins read
0
Strategy
TwitterWhatsappLinkedin

Strategy Inc., formerly MicroStrategy, is known for boasting a bold promise: it will never sell its $66 billion of Bitcoin. However, this “never” promise comes with a very high and rising price tag. As of late 2025, the company is incurring $689 million in annual cash obligations simply to service the debt and dividends that were used to acquire its Bitcoin, a number that its actual software business cannot support.

You might also like

Japan’s Pension Sector Tests the Waters: Corporate Fund to Allocate 1% to Cryptocurrency

BRC-20 Tokens Explained: What They Are and How They Work on Bitcoin

How Bitcoin ETF Taxes Work: A Complete Guide for Investors

This has effectively turned the world’s largest corporate Bitcoin holder into a high-wire financial act, one entirely dependent on investor faith and a continually rising stock price to pay its bills.

The ‘Bitcoin Yield’ Dilemma

Led by founder Michael Saylor, Strategy (which officially rebranded in 2025) is no longer just a software company; it’s the world’s first “Bitcoin Treasury Company.” Its primary goal is to achieve a positive “BTC Yield”—a metric for acquiring more Bitcoin per share, faster than it dilutes its stock.

Year-to-date, the company has been successful, accreting its holdings by 26.1%. But this growth is funded by a costly mechanism: selling new preferred shares (like STRK and STRF) that carry high dividend yields, some ranging from 8% to 10.5%. Every new Bitcoin purchase, therefore, adds to the mountain of annual cash obligations.

A Business That Can’t Pay the Bills

This model creates a significant cash-flow problem. Strategy’s legacy enterprise analytics software business is not a cash cow. While the company reported an impressive $3.9 billion in operating income in the third quarter of 2025, its own earnings report clarifies this was almost entirely due to the $3.9 billion in unrealized gains from its Bitcoin holdings under new fair value accounting rules.

In stark contrast, its actual total revenues for the first nine months of 2025 were less than $355 million. This is not nearly enough to cover the $689 million in annual debt interest and dividend payments, a figure that company forecasts show will soon grow into the billions.

Relying on a ‘Multiple-to-Net Asset Value’

So, how does Strategy pay its bills without selling Bitcoin or generating enough revenue? By selling more stock. The company’s survival depends on its ability to issue new equity (both common and preferred) to pay the interest and dividends on its existing equity and debt.

This model works only as long as investors are optimistic. This optimism is measured by a key metric: the multiple-to-Net Asset Value (mNAV). This is the premium investors are willing to pay for MSTR stock versus the actual Bitcoin it holds.

The Premium of Trust

As of late 2025, investors are paying a hefty premium—a mNAV between 1.07x and 1.3x. In essence, they are paying 7% to 30% more for MSTR stock than if they just bought Bitcoin themselves.

Why? They are betting on Michael Saylor. They trust his ability to use the company’s corporate structure to raise capital and acquire more Bitcoin, growing the “BTC Yield” per share. This premium exists even though, as company lawyers disclose, owning MSTR stock gives shareholders no direct legal claim to the company’s $66 billion in Bitcoin.

A Perpetual Financing Machine?

Strategy has successfully purchased Bitcoin in every single quarter since 2020 and plans to continue “forever.” But this strategy has turned the company into a financial marvel, or a house of cards, depending on your perspective. Its annual costs are already nearly $700 million and rising.

To avoid selling its Bitcoin, it must successfully and perpetually sell new stock to a market that must remain perpetually optimistic. As long as the mNAV premium holds, the machine keeps running. If that faith—or the price of Bitcoin—falters, the entire model faces an existential test.

Tweet54SendShare15
Previous Post

JPMorgan Sees 67% Upside for Bitcoin, Setting $170,000 Price Target

Next Post

M&M Sells Entire Stake in RBL Bank for ₹678 Crore, Marks Strategic Exit

Anindya Paul

Professional content creator with strong expertise in content writing, filmmaking and social media strategy. Skilled in digital storytelling, scriptwriting, video production, sound design and graphic design - crafting compelling narratives across platforms. Known for delivering high-quality, engaging content under tight deadlines. A collaborative team player with a sharp creative instinct, adaptability to evolving trends, and a focus on impactful, results-driven communication.

Recommended For You

Japan’s Pension Sector Tests the Waters: Corporate Fund to Allocate 1% to Cryptocurrency

by Anindya Paul
June 22, 2026
0
Japan's

The normally risk-averse arena of Japan's retirement system is undergoing significant changes. For the first time, a company's pension fund has made a formal announcement that it will...

Read more

BRC-20 Tokens Explained: What They Are and How They Work on Bitcoin

by Anindya Paul
June 22, 2026
0
Bitcoin

Throughout history, Bitcoin has been regarded as both an online currency and a way of storing value. By contrast to other blockchain systems (e.g., Ethereum), Bitcoin was never...

Read more

How Bitcoin ETF Taxes Work: A Complete Guide for Investors

by Anindya Paul
June 21, 2026
0
Bitcoin ETF

The issuance of Bitcoin exchange-traded funds (ETFs) has boosted investor confidence in cryptocurrency investments. Now, rather than physically owning and storing their investments through digital currency exchanges or...

Read more
Next Post
M&M Sells Entire Stake in RBL Bank for ₹678 Crore, Marks Strategic Exit

M&M Sells Entire Stake in RBL Bank for ₹678 Crore, Marks Strategic Exit

Please login to join discussion

Techstory

Tech and Business News from around the world. Follow along for latest in the world of Tech, AI, Crypto, EVs, Business Personalities and more.
reach us at info@techstory.in

Advertise With Us

Reach out at - info@techstory.in

Aviator Game India 2026

BROWSE BY TAG

#Crypto #howto 2024 acquisition AI amazon Apple Artificial Intelligence bitcoin Business China cryptocurrency e-commerce electric vehicles Elon Musk Ethereum facebook funding Gaming Google India Instagram Investment ios iPhone IPO Market Markets Meta Microsoft News OpenAI samsung Social Media SpaceX startup startups tech technology Tesla TikTok trend trending twitter US

© 2025 Techstory.in

No Result
View All Result
  • News
  • Crypto
  • Gadgets
  • Memes
  • Gaming
  • Cars
  • AI
  • Startups
  • Markets
  • How to

© 2025 Techstory.in

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
Are you sure want to unlock this post?
Unlock left : 0
Are you sure want to cancel subscription?