The company formerly known as MicroStrategy has snatched the title of the world’s largest corporate Bitcoin holder from BlackRock, but the victory lap comes with a staggering paper loss that threatens to overshadow the achievement. Strategy now sits on 815,061 BTC, edging past BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust at 802,824 coins, after a blistering week of accumulation that saw the firm pour $2.54 billion into the cryptocurrency.
A Record Haul Funded by Preferred Shares
Between April 13 and 19, Strategy snapped up 34,164 Bitcoin at an average price of $74,395 per coin — the third-largest single acquisition in the company’s history and its biggest weekly buying spree since November 2024. The purchase pushed Strategy’s total holdings to more than 3.8% of Bitcoin’s entire 21-million-coin supply, with the company having invested roughly $61.56 billion at an average cost of $75,527 per Bitcoin.
The financing behind this latest splurge reveals a deliberate strategy to shield common shareholders. Roughly $2.18 billion came from the sale of STRC preferred shares, while another $366 million was raised through new MSTR common stock. That means about 86% of the capital flowed through the preferred route, sparing common equity holders from direct dilution. Management is pressing ahead with its ambitious “42/42” plan, targeting a total of $84 billion in capital raises by 2027 to sustain the Bitcoin acquisition machine.
The Market Cheers, But the Books Bleed
The MSTR stock jumped 9.4% on the news, riding a Bitcoin price that briefly topped $78,000. Over a seven-day stretch, the shares gained roughly 21% in euro terms, though at around €150 they still trade more than 60% below their 52-week high of €391.80. The broader April rally pushed the stock up about 37%, outpacing even Bitcoin’s own price appreciation.
Yet when Strategy opens its books on May 5, investors will confront a jarring reality. The company is staring down an unrealized loss of $14.5 billion for the first quarter, reflecting Bitcoin’s more than 20% decline during that period. Because the firm now marks its holdings to fair value, that loss flows straight through the income statement, creating wild swings in reported earnings. On the bright side, the value destruction generates a multi-billion-dollar deferred tax asset that could cushion future tax bills.
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The Financing Engine Shows Cracks
Beneath the surface, the mechanism that powers Strategy’s entire model is losing steam. The mNAV premium — the ratio of the company’s market capitalization to the value of its Bitcoin stash — has collapsed from a peak of over 2.4 in 2024 to just 1.28 today. If that ratio slides toward 1.0, the arbitrage logic that underpins Strategy’s expansion breaks down entirely. The firm has systematically funded new Bitcoin purchases by issuing shares at a premium, but without that cushion, the aggressive treasury strategy loses its foundation.
Despite the compression, the capital-raising machine keeps humming. Strategy still has more than $46 billion in authorized issuance capacity for future deals. But analyst Ted Pillows warns that cash reserves are dwindling. Two weeks ago, the company had enough liquidity to cover roughly 24 months of dividend payments; that buffer has now shrunk to about 18 months. If the trend continues, Strategy may be forced to issue more shares, risking future dilution.
Measuring Success in Bitcoin Per Share
Rather than traditional profit metrics, Strategy tracks its performance through Bitcoin holdings per share. That figure rose 74% in 2024, 23% in 2025, and is up roughly 9.5% year-to-date in 2026. CEO Phong Le highlighted that the unrealized BTC gain surged 82% in a single week, now standing at $4.97 billion.
Wall Street remains broadly bullish despite the structural risks. The 14 analysts covering the stock give it a “Strong Buy” consensus rating with an average price target of $343.77. TD Cowen recently lifted its target to $385, pointing to strong demand for the company’s preferred shares. The broader market consensus sees fair value around $313.
Vanguard, traditionally a skeptic of direct crypto exposure, continues to rank among Strategy’s largest shareholders — a quiet signal of indirect institutional acceptance. But the model only works long-term under one strict condition: Bitcoin’s appreciation must outpace the company’s rapidly growing capital costs, particularly the dividend burden on its preferred shares. With the mNAV premium shrinking and the May 5 earnings report looming, the most aggressive Bitcoin treasury experiment on Wall Street is heading into a high-stakes stress test.
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