Bitcoin Magazine
STRC: The Global Bitcoin Dollar Cost Average
If you haven’t already, please read my last research note about takeaways from Strategy World 2026. I cover a wide range of things there, and today I want to narrow in on what I believe is the most important Bitcoin development in the last year: STRC.
STRC and Volatility
Strategy designed STRC as a variable-rate financial instrument intended to maintain a fixed market price of $100. If STRC’s trading range falls below $100, Strategy is committed to increasing the dividend payout, incentivizing bids back to the $100 target. Conversely, if STRC trades above $100, Strategy uses its At-The-Market (ATM) offering to sell more shares or reduce the dividend, allowing the price to adjust back to $100.
This financial engineering substitutes price volatility with yield volatility. Given the market’s preference for price stability, Strategy created an instrument with stable pricing but variable yield. As market confidence in Strategy’s ability to manage the peg via the dividend improves, one would expect the frequency of dividend adjustments to decrease. This creates a positive feedback loop: price stability and high trading volume facilitate Strategy’s ability to sell substantial quantities of STRC.
The result of a stable $100 price and an active at-the-market offering is a mechanism for global Dollar Cost Averaging (DCA) into Bitcoin that operates—at the margins—independently of Bitcoin’s spot price. This is a very big deal.
Explaining Dollar Cost Averaging
Dollar Cost Averaging (DCA) is a straightforward concept: averaging the dollar-denominated cost basis of an asset acquisition. It is usually implemented by committing a fixed dollar amount to purchase an asset at regular intervals, regardless of the price. This method acquires more units when prices are low and fewer when prices are high. This generally imparts a marginal downward bias on the long-term cost basis, provided the asset exhibits reasonable volatility.
Strategy’s Bitcoin Financing So Far
Prior to STRC’s $100 price stabilization, Strategy often acquired Bitcoin at local price peaks. This occurred because all its existing financing vehicles positively correlated with the BTC spot price. For example, MSTR common stock trades as a high-beta proxy for BTC. Thus, when BTC significantly rises, selling MSTR raises substantial financing. However, this dynamic meant that capital for BTC acquisition became available precisely when BTC’s price was at local highs.
Other preferred instruments largely exhibited similar behavior. When BTC was strong, credit spreads narrowed. When BTC was weak, preferred shares typically sold off. Although these are fixed income instruments that theoretically should have been less correlated, a practical correlation persisted nonetheless.
STRC changes this dynamic.
As long as sufficient volume is maintained at or above the $100 price point, Strategy ca

