Strategy (formerly MicroStrategy) shareholders are currently voting on a proposal to change the dividend payment frequency for its preferred stock from quarterly to bi-monthly (twice a month). Simultaneously, Executive Chairman Michael Saylor took to social media on Sunday to drop his signature "wealth code" hints — widely interpreted by the market as a signal of an upcoming Bitcoin purchase.
These two events happening in tandem are no coincidence. Together, they reveal the complete operating logic of Strategy's capital machine.
Strategy's business model is fundamentally a Bitcoin leverage structure: it continuously raises capital through equity offerings, convertible bonds, and preferred stock, uses that capital to buy Bitcoin, and then leverages the premium that Bitcoin holdings create to trade its common stock (MSTR) above its Bitcoin net asset value in the market.
Preferred stock plays a critical role in this structure. It attracts lower-risk-appetite, fixed-income-seeking investors, giving Strategy access to pools of capital that would never directly buy Bitcoin. Shifting dividend payments from quarterly to bi-monthly further reduces the waiting cost for these investors, enhancing the market appeal of the preferred stock. This allows Strategy to issue more preferred stock at lower cost in the future — ultimately to buy more Bitcoin.
Saylor's simultaneous BTC purchase signal is a message to the market: the capital flywheel is still spinning.
This event carries very different implications for different market participants:
MSTR common stock holders need to understand that the company's valuation is highly dependent on the Bitcoin price and the market's continued willingness to pay a premium for the "Bitcoin treasury" narrative. If Bitcoin enters a prolonged bear market, or if the market stops pricing in a premium, this flywheel structure will face severe stress.
Strategy preferred stock holders (e.g., STRK, STRF) face a different risk matrix: dividends appear stable, but the underlying asset is highly volatile Bitcoin. Bi-monthly payments improve cash flow consistency, but the company's overall financial leverage is not reduced as a result.
Bitcoin spot market participants should note that Strategy's continuous accumulation — currently holding over 500,000 BTC worth approximately $43 billion — represents a significant structural demand component in the market. However, this level of concentrated institutional holdings also represents a potential systemic risk concentration point.
The Missing Link: The bi-monthly dividend mechanism lets Strategy attract fixed-income capital at lower cost, but the trade-off is that the company's financial leverage structure becomes even more sensitive to Bitcoin price movements.
Don't treat Saylor's social media posts as short-term trading signals. This is the most common cognitive trap — his signals often precede actual purchases by days or even weeks, and the scale and timing of those purchases remain opaque.
The indicators truly worth tracking are:
If you believe in Bitcoin's long-term narrative, holding Bitcoin spot or ETFs is a structurally simpler expression of that view. If you choose to express that view through Strategy, make sure you fully understand that you are taking on Bitcoin risk + leveraged structure risk + single-company risk in combination.
Saylor's simultaneous management of social media signals and the preferred stock dividend vote is a textbook case of capital narrative management — the short-term dividend frequency adjustment is a tactic, while continuously expanding Bitcoin holdings is the strategy. The real question isn't "how many coins did they buy this time," but rather "under what conditions can this capital flywheel keep spinning, and under what conditions does it begin to unravel." Industry observers should focus their energy on tracking the evolution of Strategy's leverage structure, not on watching short-term price reactions to each Bitcoin purchase announcement.