Strategy Inc. (MSTR) just announced it's building something unusual: a $1.44 billion cash reserve to sit alongside its enormous Bitcoin hoard. The company bought another 130 Bitcoin (BTC) and revealed on Monday that it raised the USD reserve in less than nine days by selling equity at an average of 1.17 times modified net asset value.
The concept here is straightforward. Strategy wants to keep buying Bitcoin without being forced to sell any during market downturns. So it's stockpiling traditional dollars to cover dividends and interest payments when crypto prices take a dive.
Recalibrating Expectations as Bitcoin Retreats
CEO Fong Lee shared updated numbers that reflect a more conservative outlook than earlier in the year. The firm now holds 650,000 Bitcoin, valued at roughly $59 billion based on the December 1st snapshot. But Lee adjusted the company's year-end Bitcoin price assumption down significantly, now expecting a range between $85,000 and $110,000 instead of the previous $150,000 target.
Under that revised range, Strategy expects to see year-end BTC dollar gains between $8.4 billion and $12.8 billion. Through the first three quarters of 2025, the company reported $12 billion in operating income and $8.6 billion in net income. Lee noted that earnings will shift meaningfully depending on whether Bitcoin finishes the year above or below $94,000, the threshold that produced full-year profitability back in 2024.
The company's BTC yield metric, which measures how efficiently it's accumulating Bitcoin relative to share dilution, stands at 24.6% as of November 30th. That's slightly below the full-year target of 30%. Lee expects the year to close between 22% and 26%, depending on how much digital credit and equity the company issues in the final weeks.
He also acknowledged that the earlier goal of $20 billion in BTC dollar gains is now tracking closer to $10 billion, simply because Bitcoin's price has pulled back from prior highs.
A Financial Cushion for Volatile Times
The star of Monday's announcement was the new USD reserve. Strategy raised the $1.44 billion in under nine days, and Lee emphasized that it will fund dividends and interest without requiring Bitcoin sales when markets get choppy. The company now has 21 months of dividend coverage in cash and aims to reach 24 months.
Strategy views the reserve as a protective buffer for its digital credit products, insulating them from Bitcoin's infamous volatility. Lee pointed out that despite its size, the reserve represents just 2.2% of enterprise value and 2.4% of the company's total Bitcoin holdings. It's a small slice of the pie, but it gives the company breathing room.
Saylor's Reactor and Battery Analogy
Executive Chairman Michael Saylor framed the strategy in more colorful terms. He said Strategy has built the world's first full digital credit vehicle, supported by three capital-market channels: equity, Bitcoin, and derivatives. He described the Bitcoin reserve as a "reactor" generating returns and the USD reserve as a "battery" designed to smooth out volatility.
Saylor explained that the company can raise cash for dividends by selling a small portion of its Bitcoin or using derivatives, while simultaneously expanding its Bitcoin holdings through digital credit issuance. It's a balancing act, but Saylor believes the structure can handle significant stress.
He outlined metrics showing that the firm could withstand Bitcoin falling 19% per year for a decade before reaching one-to-one collateralization. On the flip side, he highlighted that Bitcoin only needs to appreciate 1.4% annually for the company to create shareholder value. Anything above that threshold is gravy.
Deep Liquidity Pools and Performance Thresholds
Saylor also dove into the liquidity landscape. Strategy's equity trades around $3.6 billion in daily volume, while Bitcoin markets see about $50 billion daily and derivative markets clock in around $100 billion. Those deep pools give the company multiple avenues to support dividends while continuing to stack sats.
He noted that if Bitcoin appreciates faster than 10.3% per year, the company's digital credit instruments outperform simply holding Bitcoin directly. Strategy is betting that Bitcoin will continue appreciating above that rate, which seems reasonable given the asset's historical performance, though past results obviously don't guarantee future returns.
Stock Extends Decline as Technical Picture Darkens
While the company shared its strategic updates, Strategy Inc. stock wasn't rewarded by the market. Shares dropped more than 6% on Monday, hitting new lows near $166 and remaining trapped inside the descending channel that has guided price action since August. Sellers rejected the stock again at the upper boundary of that channel, keeping momentum firmly bearish.
MSTR trades well below all major exponential moving averages, with the 20-day at $205 and the 50-day near $253. Every rebound has failed at the 20-day level, confirming sustained downside pressure. The MACD indicator remains deep below zero with no sign of a bottom forming.
Support sits at the channel base near $160, and a breakdown below that level could expose the $135 zone. Bulls would need a close above the 20-day EMA to slow the downtrend and challenge the mid-channel area around $253. For now, the technical picture remains ugly despite the company's ambitious financial engineering.
The tension between Strategy's long-term Bitcoin accumulation strategy and its short-term stock performance continues to be one of the more fascinating dynamics in the crypto-adjacent equity space. The company is building infrastructure for a world where Bitcoin keeps climbing, but the market is pricing in something considerably more cautious.