Strategy announced the upcoming placement of its Stretch (STRC) preferred shares. The offer will be priced at $90, expected to close on July 29.
Strategy (MSTR) announced the extension of its preferred share program. Stretch (STRC) will be priced at $90, with the sale round expected to close on July 29. The price is at the bottom of the range where the firm intended to sell at a face value of $100. The placement announcement adds to the final features of STRC after the initial announcement.
Strategy is preparing to place 28,011,111 shares at a public offering price of $90 per share. The company expects to raise $2.474B after commissions and fees. The higher amount of shares were announced after the STRC product was oversubscribed. The final offer surpasses even the corrected raise of $2B announced earlier this week.
As with other preferred stock offerings, the proceeds of STRC will go toward acquiring more BTC and for the company’s working capital. At the current sale rate, STRC may help add between 17,000 and 21,000 BTC, depending on the market price.
The raise is higher than the initially announced $500M, potentially showing heightened interest for new types of Strategy assets. The sale of STRC arrives after Strategy announced two weekly rounds of BTC acquisition financed solely with preferred shares. While the preferred shares may be riskier, this also prevents further dilution from MSTR issues.
STRC will accumulate dividends at a variable rate, and dividends will be payable when authorized by Strategy’s board. The initial monthly regular dividend will be at 9% annualized, but the rate may be adjusted at Strategy’s discretion.
STRC issuance will be variable, aiming to maintain a $100 peg. To achieve this, Strategy will adjust the dividend rate, issue more STRC at $101, recall shares, or turn off the sale program under $99. STRC will be one of the most responsive products for Strategy, immediately reflecting demand and market conditions.
The new instrument is issued as shares, but behaves like a passive income bond. During favorable times, Strategy can force a repurchase of STRC. During unfavorable BTC price periods, holders can sell back their shares at face value. The STRC dividend rate can be adjusted monthly, but by no more than 0.25% up or down.
STRC is thus an instrument to pump cash into BTC, while behaving like a short-term fixed income instrument. The potential for yield and stability may make STRC appealing to mainstream retail investors. The STRC dividends will be paid out in cash, another feature that emulates short-term bonds.
Despite the recent slide in BTC, MSTR shares still traded above $406. STRK preferred shares hovered around 111, STRF traded at $112, and STRD was at $0.87. The preferred shares gained support from a series of private placements, as well as general demand.
STRC is not backed by the underlying BTC, which is reserved for only some of Strategy’s investors. Despite the instrument, Strategy’s approach works only if its market activities cause hype and more upside for BTC.
The new STRC shares will be senior to STRK and STRD, as well as MSTR common stock, but junior to STRF and convertible bonds from previous rounds.
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