Arca CIO Warns Strategy’s Bitcoin Bet Has ‘Gotten Out Of Hand’ - FaucetPayME News
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Arca CIO Warns Strategy’s Bitcoin Bet Has ‘Gotten Out Of Hand’

Arca CIO Jeff Dorman warned that Strategy’s Bitcoin-heavy balance sheet has entered a more dangerous phase, arguing that the company, Bitcoin holders and its preferred shareholders are now locked in...

Arca CIO Warns Strategy’s Bitcoin Bet Has ‘Gotten Out Of Hand’
Arca CIO Jeff Dorman warned that Strategy’s Bitcoin-heavy balance sheet has entered a more dangerous phase, arguing that the company, Bitcoin holders and its preferred shareholders are now locked in a difficult capital-structure tradeoff. In a May 28 post on X, Dorman said he is “not in Saylor’s inner circle,” but argued that the MSTR story has “gotten so out of hand” that the company’s recent moves now look increasingly hard to reconcile with a stable long-term financing plan. His central concern is not simply Strategy’s Bitcoin exposure, but the layering of preferred equity obligations, cash management decisions and potential pressure to eventually sell BTC if market conditions deteriorate. Arca CIO Warns MSTR Faces Bitcoin Crunch Dorman said Strategy could have avoided much of the current tension by slowing down after its initial Bitcoin accumulation strategy became a dominant part of the company’s identity. “MSTR could have sat and done nothing before they started pumping out $billons of prefs,” he wrote, adding that such a path “would have made MSTR boring” but more stable. Related Reading: Bitcoin’s Famous CME Gap Playbook May Be Nearing Its End Instead, Dorman argued, the company’s push into preferred stock appeared to rest on an aggressive assumption that Bitcoin was about to move sharply higher. “The push into these prefs was based on him clearly thinking BTC was about to moon — not sure what he saw to think that,” Dorman wrote, pointing to possible explanations such as the four-year cycle or fund flows. “But that’s the only reason to take that sort of miscalculated risk to screw up his balance sheet so badly — he must have thought BTC was about to fly and he could easily pay the pref dividends with future BTC sales.” The issue, according to Dorman, became more acute once Bitcoin began falling. He said the market grew nervous because Strategy’s roughly $15 billion in preferreds carry about $1.5 billion in annual dividends. In response, Dorman said the company raised $2 billion in cash through stock issuance, a move he characterized as a way to reduce near-term default concerns and buy “almost 2 years of runway” to cover dividends. Dorman called that cash raise a “smart move,” but said the subsequent decision to use the buffer to repurchase 2029 maturity bonds was difficult to understand. “But then for some unknown reason, he decides to take that cash buffer and buyback 2029 maturity bonds instead of using it to fund the annual dividends,” he wrote. “This is a baffling decision for a company with cash flow problems. Why pay off 0% coupon debt with the only cash you have?” The bond buyback may be mildly accretive because it was done at a discount, Dorman acknowledged. Still, his point was that the company appeared to be spending scarce liquidity on long-dated, zero-coupon debt while its preferred dividend burden remained the more immediate constraint. Dorman also left room for the possibility that Strategy Executive Chairman Michael Saylor has another capital-markets maneuver in mind. “The only bull case is that underestimating Saylor’s capital markets chicanery has been a losing proposition for years. Maybe there was a plan?” he wrote. Related Reading: Cathie Wood Doubles Down On $1.25 Million Bitcoin Target One possibility, Dorman said, is that the company could refinance the converts with new longer-dated convertibles, though he noted that Saylor has “sworn off converts,” making that outcome less likely in his view. Another possibility is selling Bitcoin to fund preferred dividends, but Dorman framed that as a potentially negative outcome for both MSTR and BTC if it comes during a sharper market decline. Asked by one X user what the way out is, Dorman gave two basic scenarios. “Sell BTC to pay the prefs — bad for MSTR, bad for BTC, good for STRC,” he wrote. “Stop paying the dividend on the prefs — good for BTC, good for MSTR, bad for STRC. Those are basically the only answers at this point.” Dorman also said neither he nor Arca is short MSTR, after another user asked whether his firm had a bearish position. His conclusion was stark: this is the first time MSTR, Bitcoin and preferred holders are “really in bind.” In Dorman’s view, the next several months could force a choice between preserving liquidity, protecting Bitcoin exposure and keeping preferred shareholders whole, a choice that may leave at least one stakeholder group absorbing serious pain. At press time, BTC traded at $73,408. Featured image created with DALL.E, chart from TradingView.com
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