Michael Saylor, the executive chairman of the software intelligence firm Strategy, has posted a familiar message earlier this week after the company disclosed another Bitcoin purchase: “Business is Good.” The company had acquired 1,550 Bitcoin for roughly $101 million, pushing its total holdings to 845,256 BTC and reinforcing its position as the world’s largest corporate Bitcoin holder.
- Strategy Inc. (MSTR) increases its treasury to 845,256 BTC, but the company’s "BTC Yield" metric faces scrutiny as spot Bitcoin prices remain below the firm's aggregate cost basis.
- The company's unique "BitVac" capital cycle—which issues equity at a premium to purchase Bitcoin—faces structural pressure as the market premium for MSTR shares compresses.
- Strategy Inc. departs from its "never sell" narrative to service preferred dividend obligations, forcing a re-evaluation of the company as a leveraged financing system rather than a pure Bitcoin proxy.
But the market reaction that followed focused less on the purchase itself and more on what the company’s own metrics now revealed about the state of Strategy’s balance sheet. The debate centered around a figure Saylor highlighted repeatedly this year: “BTC Yield,” a proprietary metric Strategy used to measure how much Bitcoin backed each share of the company over time.
Supporters described the number as proof the company’s capital strategy continued to work even during market weakness. Critics argued the metric obscured a more uncomfortable reality beneath the surface. At current Bitcoin prices near $61,000, Strategy’s holdings were worth substantially less than the company’s estimated aggregate purchase price.
That tension reopened one of the largest unresolved questions surrounding Strategy’s transformation from enterprise software company into a leveraged Bitcoin acquisition vehicle: whether the model ultimately depended more on Bitcoin itself or on investors continuing to pay a premium for Strategy shares.
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👉 Submit Your PRThe Metric Behind The Debate
Independent analyst Shanaka Anslem Perera said much of the confusion surrounding Strategy’s recent disclosures stemmed from how investors interpreted the company’s internal performance metrics.
“The figure he is flexing, BTC Yield of 12.8% this year, is not a yield,” Perera wrote Monday on X. “It is the percentage rise in how much Bitcoin each share owns.”
Perera argued the metric measured dilution efficiency rather than traditional profitability. When Strategy sold shares above the value of the Bitcoin already sitting on its balance sheet, the company could purchase additional Bitcoin in quantities that increased the amount of BTC backing each outstanding share.
Under that framework, the strategy continued functioning as designed. “A share owns 12.8% more Bitcoin than it did in January,” Perera wrote. “That part is real.” But he also noted that Strategy’s Bitcoin holdings remained underwater relative to acquisition cost at current market prices.
“At an average cost near $75,700 against a $61,410 spot, the 845,256 coins cost roughly $64 billion and are worth about $52 billion,” he wrote. The distinction became central to the broader argument emerging across crypto markets this week.
Strategy’s internal metrics measured Bitcoin accumulation per share. Traditional balance-sheet analysis measured whether the underlying asset itself had appreciated relative to cost. Those two signals were no longer pointing in the same direction.
Critics Questioned Whether The Model Still Supported Strategy’s Premium
Several longtime crypto market participants argued the issue extended beyond temporary unrealized losses. Crypto trader K A L E O said Saylor appeared to shift away from emphasizing “Bitcoin per share,” or BPS growth, after Strategy defended its recent capital raise using broader net asset calculations instead.
“MSTR’s premium has never been about a screenshot of the static balance sheet,” K A L E O wrote. “The market pays for future BPS growth and leverage.” He argued Strategy faced a structural contradiction. “NAV defends the deal but condemns the premium,” he wrote. “BPS growth defends the premium but condemns the deal.”
The criticism reflected growing concern among some investors that Strategy’s model depended heavily on its stock continuing to trade above the value of the Bitcoin and liabilities attached to the company.
That premium historically allowed Strategy to issue shares at valuations high enough to acquire additional Bitcoin without reducing Bitcoin exposure per shareholder. If the premium narrowed significantly, the mechanism supporting continued accretion could weaken.
Perera described the premium as “the engine” behind the system. “Let the premium fade and the machine stops minting yield, leaving only the price bet underneath,” he wrote.
Recent Bitcoin Sales Intensified Scrutiny
The discussion intensified after Strategy recently disclosed a sale of 32 Bitcoin tied to dividend obligations connected to one of its preferred stock offerings. The transaction was financially small relative to Strategy’s total holdings, but it drew outsized attention because Saylor had spent years publicly framing Bitcoin as a long-term treasury reserve asset the company would not sell.
Critics argued the sale challenged that narrative. Economist Peter Schiff, a longtime Bitcoin critic, said Strategy’s latest purchase had already declined in value shortly after acquisition. “Worse, the buy actually reduced Bitcoin per share, creating a negative Bitcoin yield,” Schiff wrote Monday.
Others viewed the company’s subsequent 1,550 Bitcoin purchase as an attempt to restore confidence after backlash surrounding the earlier sale.
Spanish crypto commentator Miyagi Crypto described the move as “a tense calm,” arguing Strategy increasingly relied on issuing additional shares to maintain both its Bitcoin accumulation strategy and preferred dividend structure. “To come up with this money, he had to sell shares in his own company,” Miyagi Crypto wrote. “If he did it, it’s to try to save STRC.”
The company funded its latest Bitcoin purchase largely through equity issuance rather than direct asset liquidation. That distinction mattered because it reinforced a central feature of Strategy’s model: Bitcoin itself was rarely intended to serve as the operating funding source.
The equity premium was.
Bitcoin’s Price Remained The Largest Variable
Despite the criticism, Strategy’s model remained highly sensitive to Bitcoin’s future direction. If Bitcoin recovered above Strategy’s aggregate acquisition price, unrealized losses across the company’s holdings would reverse quickly while the accumulated Bitcoin-per-share growth would remain intact.
That possibility remained central to bullish arguments surrounding the stock. Supporters continued to view Strategy as the most aggressive institutional expression of long-term Bitcoin conviction in public markets.
But the conversation surrounding the company increasingly shifted away from simple Bitcoin exposure and toward questions about financial engineering, capital structure and sustainability during periods of prolonged downside volatility.
The company’s balance sheet now sat at the center of one of the largest live experiments in corporate Bitcoin finance. And investors appeared increasingly divided over how much of the outcome depended on Bitcoin itself and how much depended on the market continuing to believe in the machine Saylor built around it.
ChainStreet’s Take
The debate surrounding Strategy is no longer really about whether Bitcoin rises or falls. It is increasingly about whether the financial structure wrapped around that Bitcoin can continue functioning under pressure.
Saylor built a system that rewarded shareholders when Strategy stock traded at a premium large enough to fund additional Bitcoin purchases without materially diluting exposure per share. That mechanism worked spectacularly during strong market conditions.
What investors are now testing is whether the same structure remains durable when Bitcoin trades below Strategy’s aggregate cost basis and the premium supporting the entire flywheel begins compressing. The distinction matters because Strategy is no longer behaving like a conventional software company holding Bitcoin on its balance sheet. It has effectively become a publicly traded Bitcoin financing system whose success depends on both the asset price and continued market confidence in the structure itself.
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