Crypto Exec Warns STRC Holders Mispricing Perpetual Risk
Investors holding perpetual preferred stocks such as Strategy's Variable Rate Series A Perpetual Stretch Preferred Stock (STRC) are significantly underestimating risks tied to liquidity and interest rates, according to Matt Dines, chief investment officer at credit asset manager Build Markets. These stocks, which lack a maturity date, expose holders to risks that could erode value in a tightening market environment.
"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," Dines told TFTC media in a recent interview. "If this dislocation comes in liquidity, it will come from the fiat side." Dines emphasized that perpetuals are uniquely vulnerable because they lack mechanisms, like maturity dates, that could limit exposure over time.
STRC’s Rapid Growth and Record Trading Volumes
The warning from Dines coincides with a surge in demand for STRC. On May 14, daily trading volumes hit a record $1.5 billion, signaling growing investor interest in the preferred stock as Strategy leans on this funding vehicle to fuel its Bitcoin purchases. STRC is currently trading near $99 per share with a variable dividend rate of 11.5%, according to Strategy’s official data.
The total market value of outstanding STRC shares has reached approximately $8.4 billion, with $8.5 billion in notional face value. However, the company’s ability to issue more STRC is capped at $28 billion, a ceiling that, if not raised, could slow Strategy’s Bitcoin accumulation within the next year, according to research from Delphi Digital.
Broader Risks in Perpetual Preferreds
Perpetual preferred stocks, unlike bonds, lack a redemption date, leaving valuation tied to dividend yields relative to market interest rates. Rising rates pressure prices downward as fixed dividends appear less attractive. As of May 11, 2026, the S&P U.S. Preferred Stock Index stood at 656.19, reflecting mild declines amid expectations of higher Treasury yields. This dynamic has weighed on preferred securities broadly, with funds like the iShares Preferred and Income Securities ETF (PFF) reporting a 30-day SEC yield of 6.34% in March 2026.
Historically, preferred instruments thrive in stable or declining rate environments, but current market conditions—characterized by liquidity tightening and shifting Federal Reserve expectations—have heightened risk for perpetual holders. Corporate issuers, including FS KKR, have continued to tap preferred funding, with FS KKR recently announcing a $150 million perpetual convertible issuance on May 11, 2026.
The Path Ahead for STRC
Investors eyeing STRC’s high dividend yields must weigh the trade-offs, especially as liquidity risks remain elevated. Strategy’s aggressive use of STRC to fund Bitcoin purchases links its performance not just to interest rate conditions but also to crypto market volatility. With the $28 billion issuance cap in sight and rising market concerns about perpetual pricing, the next 12 months could determine whether STRC maintains its momentum or faces a recalibration.