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Strategy (NASDAQ: MSTR) has declared its intention to repurchase $1.5B in face value of its 2029 convertible notes, a transaction that should raise plenty of eyebrows about the sustainability of its financing structure.
What's the Scoop?
- Debt Buyback: According to a Form 8-K "Current Report" filed yesterday and announced this morning with the Securities and Exchange Commission, Strategy has "entered into privately negotiated transactions with certain holders of its outstanding 0% Convertible Senior Notes due 2029" to repurchase $1.5B for roughly $1.38B.
- No Good Option: According to the filing, "Strategy expects to fund the Repurchases with available cash reserves, proceeds from sales of securities under its at-the-market offering program, and/or proceeds from the sale of bitcoin." Opting for the first option is feasible given Strategy’s $2.25B cash reserve, but doing so would meaningfully reduce the runway for its $1.4B in annual dividend obligations to just over 7 months, potentially undermining confidence in dividend-dependent financing vehicles like STRC. Choosing to fund the repurchase through the second option would rely on new capital to retire existing obligations (indicative of a ponzi scheme), while resorting to the third option would dilute shareholders’ BTC exposure, weakening the core investment appeal of MSTR.
- Shifting Tone: This latest disclosure marks another massive departure step from Michael Saylor’s long-standing “never sell BTC” mantra. Just last week, Saylor said Strategy may sell bitcoin to fund dividends tied to its STRC preferred stock program.
Strategy to repurchase $1.5 billion principal amount of 2029 convertible notes. $MSTR $STRC https://t.co/QVYDSr5keh
— Strategy (@Strategy) May 15, 2026