MicroStrategy’s Dividend Coverage Falls to 14 Months as Bitcoin Stalls

What You Need to Know
- Strategy’s cash reserves fell 38% in 2026 while dividend obligations jumped from $300 million to $1.2 billion.
- Dividend coverage collapsed to approximately 14 months from over seven years, creating immediate liquidity pressure.
- Strategy’s business model depends on rising Bitcoin prices; current $10.6 billion unrealized losses make selling Bitcoin to raise cash problematic.
- Company used $1.5 billion to repurchase convertible notes, further reducing cash reserves needed for obligations.
CryptoQuant’s public call for Strategy to stop buying Bitcoin is the kind of signal that gets ignored until it isn’t. The on-chain analytics firm argues that Strategy’s cash reserves have fallen 38% in 2026, its annualized dividend obligations have jumped from roughly $300 million to $1.2 billion, and dividend coverage has collapsed from over seven years to approximately 14 months. That is not a theoretical stress scenario. It is the current balance sheet.
The structural problem is that Strategy’s capital model was built for a rising Bitcoin price, and the price has not cooperated. With Bitcoin near $62,500 and the company sitting on an estimated $10.6 billion in unrealized losses, selling BTC to raise cash would lock in damage across a position accumulated over several years. The company also used $1.5 billion to repurchase convertible notes due in 2029, which thinned the cash cushion further. Capriole Investments founder Charles Edwards made a related point this week, arguing that Strategy has become too dependent on continued Bitcoin appreciation to service its growing obligations, and that the risks are not being eliminated but deferred. This echoes the same dynamic that made leveraged yield structures catastrophic in 2022: the model works until the asset stops moving in one direction, and then the obligations don’t pause with it.
The company’s preferred stock pressure is not a new concern, but the dividend coverage timeline collapsing to 14 months puts a concrete number on what was previously a directional worry.
What Changes If the Buying Stops
If Strategy pauses accumulation, the market loses one of the most consistent and publicized Bitcoin buyers of the past four years. That matters less for price mechanics than it does for narrative: Strategy’s purchases have functioned as a continuous signal of institutional conviction, and a pause reframes the story in ways that are harder to undo than a single missed buy. Edwards went further, suggesting Saylor should reduce debt, close certain yield products, and reposition Strategy toward acquiring Bitcoin treasury vehicles trading at discounts to NAV rather than continuously issuing capital to buy spot BTC. The suggestion reflects a broader pattern playing out across corporate Bitcoin treasury strategies, where the simplicity of the accumulation thesis is running into the complexity of actually funding it.
CryptoQuant’s Julio Moreno framed the recommendation as a temporary pause to rebuild reserves before resuming accumulation with a more structured approach. Whether that framing survives contact with Strategy’s actual capital structure is a different question. For several years, investors priced Strategy almost entirely on Bitcoin holdings. The dividend clock now running at 14 months suggests they may not have that luxury much longer.
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