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Home»Cryptocurrency & Free Speech Finance»Strategy Adds $2.5 Billion in Bitcoin as STRC Dividend Traders Drive Largest Buy Since 2024
Cryptocurrency & Free Speech Finance

Strategy Adds $2.5 Billion in Bitcoin as STRC Dividend Traders Drive Largest Buy Since 2024

News RoomBy News Room3 months agoNo Comments3 Mins Read519 Views
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Strategy Adds .5 Billion in Bitcoin as STRC Dividend Traders Drive Largest Buy Since 2024
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In brief

  • Strategy made its largest Bitcoin purchase in over 16 months, scooping up $2.54 billion last week.
  • One former Strategy bear speculated that traders using leverage piled into Strategy’s flagship preferred share to capture its upcoming dividend.
  • On Friday, Strategy’s Michael Saylor proposed semi-monthly dividends for the preferred share to “stabilize price, dampen cyclicality, drive liquidity, and grow demand.”

Strategy reported its largest Bitcoin purchase in over 16 months on Monday, scooping up $2.54 billion worth of BTC last week as traders snapped up its flagship preferred share to receive an upcoming dividend.

The Tysons Corner, Virginia-based firm said that it purchased roughly 34,200 Bitcoin, lifting its stockpile to a total of around 815,000 Bitcoin. With Bitcoin trading close to $75,400, the sum was valued at around $61.4 billion, according to CoinGecko.

The Bitcoin-buying firm announced that it had issued nearly $2.2 billion worth of STRC, Strategy’s dividend-paying preferred share, which currently pays 11.5% in monthly dividends and is designed to trade around the $100 mark.

STRC’s ex-dividend date passed last Wednesday, representing the day on which investors buying the dividend-paying product no longer receive the next scheduled payment. Leading up to that threshold, STRC traded at or above the $100 mark for 10 straight trading days, indicating that the preferred share now valued at $8.5 billion saw consistent demand.

Andy Constan, a former Strategy bear and founder of research firm Damped Spring Advisors, wagered that STRC saw heightened demand from dividend-capture traders, who typically buy stocks immediately before the ex-dividend date and sell shortly after.

“Dudes I know were all in [STRC] leveraged long last night and have never done a div capture trade in their life,” he said in an X post last week.

Before Monday’s opening bell, the company’s stock had fallen 2% to $163, according to Yahoo Finance. On Friday, Strategy’s shares surged nearly 12% to $166, as the Bitcoin-buying firm’s industry-leading stockpile showed a profit on paper for the first time in months.

On Myriad, a prediction market owned by Decrypt parent company Dastan, traders foresaw a 13% chance Strategy would pare its holdings this year. On Feb. 1, when Strategy’s stockpile plunged underwater, traders foresaw a 31% chance of Strategy tapping its stash.

On Sunday, Strategy co-founder and Executive Chairman Michael Saylor told followers to “Think Even Bigger” in an X post, hinting at the size of the company’s recent purchase. A day before, he flicked at conflict in the Middle East, noting it’s “impossible to blockade Bitcoin.”

Following STRC’s ex-dividend date last week, the company proposed semi-monthly dividends for the preferred share. “These proposed changes are intended to stabilize price, dampen cyclicality, drive liquidity, and grow demand,” Saylor said in an X post.

Strategy’s latest buy represents its largest since November 2024. Days before, the company said that it had sold $3 billion worth of convertible bonds due in 2029, which grant holders the option of exchanging bonds for common shares should they reach $672.40 apiece.

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Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Photo: WORLD ECONOMIC FORUM/swiss-image.ch/Jolanda Flubacher Benjamin Netanyahu’s coalition wants to impose what it calls “institutional neutrality” on the country’s universities. The proposals – which could become reality within a month – would prevent higher education institutions from taking political positions, organising strikes or suspending teaching in response to political developments. University presidents would themselves be barred from expressing views that might be perceived as political or could encourage others to be. All of which sounds more like “neuter” than “neutrality”. There’s a concession: lecturers and students can express themselves politically and “participate in public discourse” provided that the activity is done privately “and is not specific to the institution or done by virtue of their academic or administrative role and does not harm the institution’s regular activity”. These are very broad caveats, which will still leave people very exposed. There’s nothing subtle about these plans. They’re clearly designed to stop campuses mobilising against controversial government measures, of which in Netanyahu’s Israel there are now many. They will also chill academic freedom more broadly. After all, universities are not meant to be impartial spaces. They are meant to be intellectually independent and curious. They are meant to question orthodoxies, challenge power and create conditions in which difficult ideas can be tested. In the words of poet Stephen Spender in his op-ed that launched Index, “universities represent the developing international consciousness which depends so much on the free interchange of people, and of ideas.” Israeli academics understand the danger. One organisation opposing the proposals described them as “the essence of dictatorship, tyranny of silencing and instilling fear in those whose nature is independent thought”. They warned: “History will remember who was in positions of power and did not turn over every stone to prevent the elimination of Israeli academia and democracy.” This is not the first attack those within Israeli universities faced. As reported by our writer Akin Ajayi, Palestinian academics and students within Israel have already experienced harassment in various forms. This led to one person telling us “silence is the best option”. Then there’s the destruction of Gaza’s higher education system, which has been described by some as “scholasticide”. The assault is not confined to academia either. I read about the plans in Israel’s leading, left-leaning newspaper Haaretz. The following morning came news that the newspaper’s offices had been vandalised after a masked man threw a brick through its entrance. Haaretz has repeatedly been targeted, while only last week a similar attack struck Channel 12 News in Tel Aviv. In May this year, Israeli journalist Oren Persico wrote for us about how Israel’s targeting of Palestinian journalists had helped create an atmosphere in which Israeli journalists increasingly found themselves under attack too. His argument echoed Martin Niemöller’s famous warning: once repression becomes normalised against one group, it rarely stops there. Hence what we’re seeing in universities – both the continuation and the escalation of Netanyahu’s assault on freedom of expression. READ MORE

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