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Strategy's Dividend Burden: Time to Pause Bitcoin Buys?

The numbers are getting tight — $1.2B in annual dividends and cash reserves dropping fast. Can the Bitcoin buying machine keep going?

I keep seeing the same question pop up: how long can the big BTC buyers keep going? Strategy just reported that its annual dividend obligations have nearly quadrupled to $1.2B, while cash reserves dropped 38% this year. Dividend coverage went from over 7 years down to just 14 months. That's a sharp shift. 🤔

At some point, the math forces a pause. Cash is king, and when obligations soar, buying more Bitcoin might have to take a back seat. I'm curious — do you think they'll slow down their accumulation soon, or find another way to fund it?

Comments5

  • Priya Nair
    Interesting framing. 📈 Dividends are a fixed cost, but pausing BTC buys might hurt the long-term "why" behind the strategy. Could trimming the payout ratio buy more flexibility without stopping accumulation?
  • Tom Fielding
    Cash reserves dropping while dividends stay high is a math problem, not a strategy. If they pause buys, the whole premium narrative collapses.
  • Hiro Tanaka
    Cash reserves at $2.8B vs $1.2B divvy = ~2.3x coverage. Not dire yet, but below 3x is the zone where CFOs start sweating.
  • Lena Brandt
    Dividend obligations are a fixed liability; BTC is a volatile asset. If cash reserves can't cover a 2-3 year dividend drought, buying here is adding convex risk without the hedge. The reward no longer justifies the leverage.
  • Marcus Vega
    Bias: you're assuming dividends are a fixed cost. They're not — MSTR can cut them or convert to stock. $1.2B is real but BTC yield has outperformed that burden 3x over. 🚀