The post How Strategy new financial channels will reignite Bitcoin buying spree appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. After years of relentless buying, Strategy Inc., the digital-asset treasury firm led by Michael Saylor, has quietly eased its pace of Bitcoin accumulation. In recent weeks, company filings have shown that its BTC purchases have fallen to only a few hundred coins, representing a sharp slowdown for the largest corporate holder of the flagship cryptocurrency. During the third-quarter earnings call, Saylor explained that the slowdown was due to the firm being at an “inflection point.” According to him: “Our multiple-to-net asset value, MNAV, has been trending down and has been trending down over time as the Bitcoin asset class matures, as the volatility decreases.” However, that lull may prove temporary, as the firm’s new financing channels are now in motion. This includes a 10% euro-denominated perpetual preferred stock listed in Luxembourg and a variable-rate US issue that has just regained its $100 par value. Together, the products could reopen the flow of capital into Strategy’s Bitcoin reserves and test whether yield-hungry investors will again fund Saylor’s $70 billion wager on digital scarcity. Strategy goes international with STRE Strategy’s latest quarter underscored both the pause and the potential. The firm reported $2.8 billion in net income, mainly from unrealized gains on its Bitcoin holdings, but added only a modest number of coins. Industry analysts attributed the slowdown to lighter demand for the company’s common stock and its four listed preferred share offerings, which have long been its primary sources of funding. Bitcoin analyst James Check said: “The company is struggling to keep them above face value, and daily trade volume is so light, nobody can put any size on. The demand is tepid.” However, that may be changing as the firm expands internationally. On Nov. 3, Strategy introduced the Series A Perpetual Stream Preferred (STRE), a euro-denominated security that carries a… The post How Strategy new financial channels will reignite Bitcoin buying spree appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. After years of relentless buying, Strategy Inc., the digital-asset treasury firm led by Michael Saylor, has quietly eased its pace of Bitcoin accumulation. In recent weeks, company filings have shown that its BTC purchases have fallen to only a few hundred coins, representing a sharp slowdown for the largest corporate holder of the flagship cryptocurrency. During the third-quarter earnings call, Saylor explained that the slowdown was due to the firm being at an “inflection point.” According to him: “Our multiple-to-net asset value, MNAV, has been trending down and has been trending down over time as the Bitcoin asset class matures, as the volatility decreases.” However, that lull may prove temporary, as the firm’s new financing channels are now in motion. This includes a 10% euro-denominated perpetual preferred stock listed in Luxembourg and a variable-rate US issue that has just regained its $100 par value. Together, the products could reopen the flow of capital into Strategy’s Bitcoin reserves and test whether yield-hungry investors will again fund Saylor’s $70 billion wager on digital scarcity. Strategy goes international with STRE Strategy’s latest quarter underscored both the pause and the potential. The firm reported $2.8 billion in net income, mainly from unrealized gains on its Bitcoin holdings, but added only a modest number of coins. Industry analysts attributed the slowdown to lighter demand for the company’s common stock and its four listed preferred share offerings, which have long been its primary sources of funding. Bitcoin analyst James Check said: “The company is struggling to keep them above face value, and daily trade volume is so light, nobody can put any size on. The demand is tepid.” However, that may be changing as the firm expands internationally. On Nov. 3, Strategy introduced the Series A Perpetual Stream Preferred (STRE), a euro-denominated security that carries a…

How Strategy new financial channels will reignite Bitcoin buying spree

2025/11/05 23:08

After years of relentless buying, Strategy Inc., the digital-asset treasury firm led by Michael Saylor, has quietly eased its pace of Bitcoin accumulation.

In recent weeks, company filings have shown that its BTC purchases have fallen to only a few hundred coins, representing a sharp slowdown for the largest corporate holder of the flagship cryptocurrency.

During the third-quarter earnings call, Saylor explained that the slowdown was due to the firm being at an “inflection point.”

According to him:

However, that lull may prove temporary, as the firm’s new financing channels are now in motion.

This includes a 10% euro-denominated perpetual preferred stock listed in Luxembourg and a variable-rate US issue that has just regained its $100 par value.

Together, the products could reopen the flow of capital into Strategy’s Bitcoin reserves and test whether yield-hungry investors will again fund Saylor’s $70 billion wager on digital scarcity.

Strategy goes international with STRE

Strategy’s latest quarter underscored both the pause and the potential. The firm reported $2.8 billion in net income, mainly from unrealized gains on its Bitcoin holdings, but added only a modest number of coins.

Industry analysts attributed the slowdown to lighter demand for the company’s common stock and its four listed preferred share offerings, which have long been its primary sources of funding.

Bitcoin analyst James Check said:

However, that may be changing as the firm expands internationally.

On Nov. 3, Strategy introduced the Series A Perpetual Stream Preferred (STRE), a euro-denominated security that carries a 10% annual dividend, paid quarterly in cash.

The dividend is cumulative and increases by 100 basis points per missed period, up to a maximum of 18%. It added that the proceeds from this fundraising will be used for “general corporate purposes, including Bitcoin acquisition.”

Notably, the economic backdrop favors experimentation.

According to BNY Mellon, euro-denominated corporate bond spreads remain tight by historical standards even after the European Central Bank’s tightening cycle. The region has seen the second-highest investment-grade inflows in six years, pushing total market size beyond €3.2 trillion across more than 3,700 issuers.

With BBB yields near 3.5% and single-Bs around 6.5% (FTSE Russell), STRE’s 10% coupon stands out. Bitcoin analyst Adam Livingston said:

STRE’s Yield Comparison (Source: Strategy)

STRC hits par to reopen the US tap

Meanwhile, the European listing follows movement at home that could also reignite an additional source of funding for the firm.

During Strategy’s third-quarter earnings call, the firm announced that it would raise the coupon on its US-listed Variable-Rate Series A Perpetual Stretch Preferred (STRC) by 25 basis points to 10.5% in November.

The adjustment is meant to stabilize market pricing and keep the preferred near its $100 target.

Following the announcement, STRC reached the $100 par for the first time since its launch in July.

Strategy’s investor Mark Harvey pointed out that this development would allow the company to sell new shares and funnel that liquidity into BTC.

He said:

Financial analyst Rajat Soni echoed the enthusiasm, saying:

Indeed, Saylor had explained that “as the credit investors start to understand the appeal of digital credit, they’re going to want to buy more, and we’re going to sell more and issue more credit.”

He added:

What does this mean for Bitcoin?

At its peak, Strategy Inc. was the most aggressive corporate buyer of Bitcoin.

Data from Bitwise shows the firm added more than 40,000 BTC in the third quarter, far surpassing every other public holder. Those purchases, analysts say, have repeatedly supported market sentiment and, at times, the asset’s spot price.

According to CryptoQuant analyst JA Maarturn, Strategy’s stock remains “highly correlated with Bitcoin’s price,” reflecting how the company’s trading often mirrors that of the cryptocurrency itself.

MSTR and Bitcoin Price Correlation (Source: CryptoQuant)

That linkage could strengthen again because the revival of STRC and the debut of STRE create a two-continent funding loop capable of reigniting corporate Bitcoin accumulation.

Beyond Strategy’s balance sheet, the twin preferreds deepen Bitcoin’s financial integration with the traditional ecosystem. Each share sold channels conventional yield-seeking capital into exposure to Bitcoin’s balance-sheet value, effectively transforming investor appetite for income into indirect demand for the asset.

Peter Duan, a Bitcoin analyst, also pointed out that the products would introduce a significant “liquidity” factor to the market.

According to him:

Strategy’s Preferred Shares Liquidity (Source: Duan)

That depth matters because a greater turnover reduces funding friction and accelerates the flow of capital between investor demand and Bitcoin acquisition.

So, if  STRC holds its par value and STRE gains traction in Europe, each new tranche could act as a direct liquidity conduit from traditional markets into the crypto economy.

Moreover, Saylor’s model also reframes Bitcoin’s macro role as not merely a speculative reserve but a collateral base for yield engineering.

This provides a clear feedback loop, showing that healthy preferred markets enable new issuance, which finances Bitcoin purchases; these purchases, in turn, reinforce balance-sheet value and market perception of scarcity.

Mentioned in this article

Source: https://cryptoslate.com/how-strategy-plans-to-kickstart-its-bitcoin-buying-internationally/

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