Investors Mispricing Risk in Perpetual Preferred Stocks like Strategy's STRC, Says CIO
Auf einen Blick
- Build Markets CIO Matt Dines argues investors are mispricing risk for perpetual preferred stocks, citing Strategy's STRC as an example.
- He highlights the indefinite liquidity and interest rate risks due to the lack of maturity dates.
- Demand for STRC has surged, with record trading volume as Strategy uses preferred stock to fund Bitcoin purchases.
KI-generierte Zusammenfassung
Warum es wichtig ist
Matt Dines, CIO of Build Markets, stated that investors are mispricing risk for perpetual preferred stocks, using Strategy's STRC as an example. Perpetual preferred stocks do not have a maturity date, meaning issuers never have to repay the principal, and holders must sell on the secondary market to recover their investment, exposing them to perpetual liquidity and interest rate risks.
Investors are mispricing risk for perpetual preferred stocks, like Bitcoin treasury company Strategy’s Variable Rate Series A Perpetual Stretch Preferred Stock (STRC), according to Matt Dines, the chief investment officer of credit asset management company Build Markets.
The corporate issuers of perpetual preferred stocks never have to repay holders their principal investment, and can just pay dividends indefinitely, without renegotiating the investment terms, Dines told the Truth for the Commoner (TFTC) media outlet.
If holders want to cash out, they must sell the perpetuals on the secondary market to recover their principal, which leaves holders exposed to liquidity contraction and interest rate risks that exist forever because perpetuals lack a maturity date, he said. He added:
“If spreads start to rise and the market demands higher yields from corporate borrowers, you also have to attach that to the infinite duration of the perpetual. So, if this dislocation comes in liquidity, it will come from the fiat side.”
Basic performance metrics for Strategy's STRC perpetual preferred stock. Source: SaylorTracker
The analysis comes amid growing demand for STRC; on Thursday, its daily trading volume surged to $1.5 billion, a new record for the financial instrument, as Strategy leans into preferred stock issuance to fund its Bitcoin purchases.
Related: Strategy to repurchase $1.5B of 2029 convertible notes
Strategy’s preferred funding vehicle may hit a ceiling in the next year
STRC currently has an authorized issuance cap of about $28 billion, according to crypto research company Delphi Digital.
If the authorized issuance cap is not raised before the $28 billion threshold, the company’s BTC accumulation may slow down, Delphi’s researchers said.
The total notional face value of outstanding STRC shares already sits at $8.5 billion, with the total market value of all outstanding shares at the time of this writing totaling about $8.4 billion.
STRC is trading at about $99 per share at the time of publication and carries a dividend rate of 11.5%, according to Strategy.
Detailed STRC performance metrics. Source: Strategy
The preferred stock’s dividend rate is variable, meaning that the yield offered to investors is subject to change on a monthly basis.
Strategy has also opened up voting for its common equity and STRC holders to approve semi-monthly dividend payments.
Offene Fragen
- Will Strategy raise the issuance cap for STRC?
- What are the specific terms of the semi-monthly dividend payment vote?
- How will potential interest rate hikes impact STRC holders?
- What is the exact timeline for the potential slowdown in BTC accumulation?






