Strategy's MSTR may plunge 80% if it repeats this dot-com-era fractal
MSTR Bearish Reversal Pattern Points to 80% Downside Risk
As of late June, MSTR’s monthly chart was painting a potential head-and-shoulders (H&S) pattern. An H&S pattern develops when the price forms three peaks, with the middle peak, called the "head," being steeper than the other two, which are called "shoulders." The neckline is the support level connecting the major pullbacks between those peaks. The pattern typically resolves when the price breaks below the neckline and, in a perfect scenario, falls by as much as the maximum distance between the head and the neckline.
MSTR has formed a near-perfect H&S pattern since March 2024 and risks a breakdown below the neckline support at $100–$105. A decisive move below it would confirm the bearish setup. It could open the door to a deeper, multi-year correction toward the measured target of around $20, down approximately 80% from current levels.
The structure looks similar to the head-and-shoulders top MSTR formed during the dot-com bubble era. Back then, the stock broke below a comparable neckline setup before collapsing by more than 99% from its peak in two years.
Strategy Cash Squeeze Raises Dilution Risk for MSTR Shareholders
Strategy’s common stock, MSTR, is facing fresh dilution risk as the company’s cash reserve shrinks and its preferred-stock dividend burden grows. As of June, Strategy’s US dollar cash reserve had fallen 38% since the start of 2026, while its yearly dividend obligations had nearly quadrupled to $1.2 billion, according to CryptoQuant analyst Julio Moreno.
The company uses cash to pay dividends on its preferred stocks, primarily Stretch (STRC). But Moreno said Strategy’s preferred-dividend coverage has dropped to about 14 months from more than seven years, meaning it now has enough cash to cover just over one year of STRC dividend payments.
That pressure has shown up in STRC’s market price. STRC fell to a record low of $82.50 last week and has since stayed mostly between $82 and $89, well below its $100 par value. The decline has pushed STRC’s effective yield above 13%, compared with its stated dividend rate of about 11.5%, showing investors are demanding a higher return to hold it.
“At current dividend obligations of $1.2 billion per year, restoring 24 months of coverage would require a cash reserve of approximately $2.8 billion, roughly twice what Strategy holds today,” Moreno said, adding: “A higher cash reserve is the most direct signal the market needs to regain confidence in STRC."
Strategy holds 847,363 BTC, acquired at an average price of about $75,650 per coin, higher than today's BTC price of around $62,600. Selling Bitcoin during a downturn could lock in losses and weaken its long-running accumulation narrative. Instead, Strategy has raised STRC’s dividend rate and issued more MSTR common shares to raise cash.
For instance, the company sold 2.71 million MSTR common shares for about $335.5 million in June, while using only $34.9 million of the proceeds to buy 520 BTC. That keeps Strategy’s Bitcoin holdings largely intact, but it increases dilution risk for existing MSTR shareholders.
If STRC remains below $100, Strategy may need to keep issuing common shares, slow Bitcoin purchases, or rebuild cash reserves. Each option could weigh on MSTR as the stock tests a bearish technical breakdown.
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