
In brief
- Strategy CEO Phong Le signaled that Strategy’s common stock is taking a backseat relative to its flagship preferred share among retail investors.
- Benchmark-StoneX’s Mark Palmer said that makes sense, describing STRC as an investment that dovetails with individuals’ accustomed thinking.
- On a notional basis, the value of common stock held by retail investors still outweighs allocations among individuals to the dividend-paying product.
Strategy CEO Phong Le signaled on Thursday that retail investors are becoming increasingly interested in the Bitcoin-buying firm’s flagship preferred share relative to its common stock, highlighting who is exposed to the company’s shift in fundraising efforts.
Although individuals currently hold approximately 40% of the company’s ordinary shares, Lee noted in a post on X that they presently make up around 80% of those invested in STRC. Strategy started pitching the shares alongside its $2.5 billion debut last year.
At a market cap of $5 billion, Lee suggested that STRC’s popularity among retail investors indicates that they “prefer low-volatility, high-yield digital credit.” The assessment comes as Strategy’s common stock (MSTR) price has plunged 56% over the past six months to $134.
Not long after STRC debuted in July, Strategy Executive Chairman and co-founder Michael Saylor said the product that currently pays 11.5% in dividends annually could be interesting for a “whole new class of people.” Those remarks focused on investors like retirees, yet the product has also started showing up on its Bitcoin-buying peers’ balance sheets.
~ 40% of $MSTR shares are owned by retail. ~ 80% of $STRC shares are owned by retail. Retail investors prefer low-volatility, high-yield digital credit.
— Phong Le (@phongle) March 26, 2026
Platforms common among retail investors have expanded access to STRC, which trades on the Nasdaq, including Robinhood, Kraken, and Webull. At 80% of STRC’s market cap, Lee indicated that retail investors hold $4 billion worth of the dividend-paying product.
On a notional basis, that’s still less than the value of common shares that Lee said retail investors hold. A 40% slice of Strategy’s $46.3 billion market cap is currently $18.5 billion.
The notion that Strategy’s common stock is losing preference among retail investors makes sense when viewed through a risk-adjusted lens, according to Mark Palmer, an equity research analyst at investment banking firm Benchmark-StoneX.
“The company’s common stock offers theoretically unbounded upside, but it is essentially a leveraged, non-yielding Bitcoin proxy and therefore better suited for sophisticated, risk-tolerant investors,” he told Decrypt. “STRC offers a predictable return through its high-yield, low-volatility, and significant Bitcoin overcollateralization that limits downside, and as such it maps better to how most retail investors are accustomed to thinking about income-generating assets.”
Analysts at Benchmark, who have penciled in a year-end price target of $705 for Strategy, are among the Bitcoin-buying firm’s most bullish on Wall Street. Analysts at TD Cowen, for example, pared their price target to $500 from $440 earlier this year.
The investment bank’s managing director of equity research, Lance Vitzana, recently told Decrypt that STRC’s uptick in issuance followed Strategy’s annual conference in Las Vegas last month. He noted that STRC was marketed aggressively during the two-day confab.
So far this month, Strategy has raised more than $1.5 billion via the dividend-paying product, which is engineered to trade at near its $100 par value. That represents around 33% of the product’s market cap, including its multi-billion-dollar public offering.
When the preferred share trades above that threshold, Strategy issues more shares to grow its Bitcoin stockpile. If the product lingers below, then the firm has indicated that it will hike the dividend in an effort to increase demand and lift STRC back towards its target.
Even though institutional investors are allocating to STRC, Palmer said that group is unlikely to displace demand from individuals. That’s because institutions tend to prefer the relative liquidity of Strategy’s common equity and asymmetric risk-reward profile, he said.
“In that sense, STRC is carving out a distinct investor base rather than competing directly with Strategy’s common stock,” Palmer added. “Importantly, this dynamic strengthens Strategy’s ability to raise capital for bitcoin accumulation, as STRC effectively expands the company’s addressable investor base.”
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