June 2026 marked the first true stress test for Bitcoin-backed preferred shares — and the market held.
BitcoinTreasuries.net called June the first real stress test for the digital credit market that treasury firms now use to fund coin purchases, and the results offer a mixed but telling verdict on where corporate Bitcoin adoption goes next.
"Starting June 18, STRC and SATA fell below their $100 par. Leveraged holders got margin-called, forced sales pushed prices down, and STRC bottomed near $75," the BitcoinTreasuries.net report said. "This was not a crisis of the underlying dividends, which kept flowing, but a crisis of positioning."
Public treasuries added close to 9,000 BTC before sales in June, or about 7,300 BTC on a net basis, worth some $427 million at the month-end price of $58,398. Michael Saylor's Strategy added 3,625 BTC net, and Strive added 3,364 BTC, with each company spending roughly $200 million. For the full second quarter, the report estimates 110,000 BTC in net additions, a pace that beat the two quarters before it.
The sell-off in digital credit instruments was the month's defining drama. Strategy's STRC and Strive's SATA — the two biggest preferred-share products — had traded in a tight band around par for months, letting leverage build as buyers borrowed to amplify the trade. When Bitcoin slid under $60,000, that leverage turned into a trigger. STRC bottomed near $75, and SATA weakened from a mix of its own pressures and spillover from STRC.
The recovery came fast enough to reassure the faithful. By July 2, STRC changed hands near $87 and SATA near $97, prices that held into the report's July 9 publication. Neither Strategy nor Strive missed a dividend. Strategy held 847,363 BTC at an average cost near $75,651 and had a $1.1 billion dollar reserve in mid-June, while Strive kept an 18-month dividend reserve.
How the model held up
Strategy did not sit still. Saylor's firm rolled out share and digital-credit buybacks, raised STRC dividends, and set up a dollar reserve — a package meant to steady prices while it kept buying coins. Saylor framed it as a balance between commitment to Bitcoin and the "liquidity, discipline, and active capital management" the credit strategy demands. Since then, Strategy has sold 3,588 BTC and now holds 843,775 coins.
The market voted with volume. Combined STRC and SATA trading topped $10 billion in June, a monthly record for each, and that came without new at-the-market share sales feeding the pipeline. Demand for the paper did not vanish when the price broke.
BitcoinTreasuries.net polled its readers, an audience it concedes leans pro-digital-credit, and found more optimism than fear. A slim majority, 52%, did not see the price drop as a major problem. Most holders sat tight, and 52% of all respondents bought STRC or SATA after June 18. At the same time, three-quarters expect price swings to recur. Looking ahead, 77.8% expect the digital-credit supply to grow by the end of 2027, and about a fifth expect it to clear $50 billion.
The stress test in digital credit played out against a broader liquidity squeeze. Investors pulled nearly $5 billion from U.S.-listed spot bitcoin ETFs in the second quarter, led by BlackRock's IBIT in June alone, according to SoSoValue. Bitcoin fell roughly 14% in the quarter, dipping below $60,000 to register its third straight quarterly loss. Meanwhile, redemption requests in the $2 trillion private credit market surged to $15.6 billion in Q2, with 10 of 16 business development companies exceeding the standard 5% quarterly cap, Fitch data shows.
"Different corners, same pattern: the buffers are wearing thin," Singapore-based QCP Capital said.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.