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Strategy's STRC preferred share has surfaced on the balance sheets of multiple publicly listed bitcoin-treasury firms, a development first reported by Decrypt on March 23, 2026. According to the Decrypt piece, STRC was recorded by at least three peer firms and prompted commentary from industry figures including Michael Saylor, who described the instrument as potentially attractive to "a whole class of people" (Decrypt, 23 Mar 2026). The appearance of STRC on corporate balance sheets is notable because it represents a third-party, equity-like instrument being used as a liquid reserve or adjunct to direct bitcoin holdings — a tactical shift from the strictly cash-and-BTC reserve mixes that have prevailed since 2020. For institutional investors and corporate treasury teams, STRC's adoption raises questions about liquidity, accounting treatment, counterparty exposure, and the comparative economics versus holding BTC directly. This article synthesizes the available public reporting, company filings, and market context to assess potential drivers, quantify observable adoption, and outline implications for the bitcoin-treasury sector.
Context
The March 23, 2026 Decrypt report provides the immediate factual anchor: at least three publicly traded bitcoin treasury firms have included Strategy's STRC preferred share on their balance sheets (Decrypt, 23 Mar 2026). That date is consequential because it marks the first consolidated media reporting that multiple peers had independently chosen to show STRC exposure, rather than the instrument being isolated to its issuer. Media corroboration and company-level disclosure in Q1 2026 filings suggest the position sizes to date are modest relative to total BTC holdings, but sufficient to indicate product-market fit for certain corporate treasury objectives.
Historically, corporate bitcoin treasuries have favored direct BTC ownership for price exposure and signaling value. From 2020 through 2024, leading firms (as captured in public filings) prioritized direct acquisition: for example, several large adopters signaled purchases measured in tens of thousands of BTC. The introduction of STRC represents a new category: preferred-share instruments designed to offer holders exposure to underlying BTC economics while remaining an equity-like claim on an issuer. This differs from ETFs, which provide regulated fund exposure, and from convertible structures and notes typically used in earlier corporate treasury experimentation.
From an accounting and regulatory lens, preferred shares also carry implications. They can be recorded as equity or liability depending on terms (convertibility, fixed dividends, redemption features). The March 2026 disclosures that accompany the Decrypt story show variation in presentation: some firms have recorded limited exposure in short-term investments or other financial assets, while others are classifying their positions differently pending auditor guidance. That heterogeneity underscores the nascent stage — institutional auditors will likely demand consistent treatment before institutional treasuries significantly scale allocations to STRC-type instruments.
Data Deep Dive
Three concrete datapoints anchor the observable trend. First, Decrypt reported on 23 March 2026 that STRC appeared on the balance sheets of at least three bitcoin-treasury firms (Decrypt, 23 Mar 2026). Second, public filings released for Q1 2026 by two of those firms — cited in market filings and analyst notes — show position sizes described by the issuers as low-single-digit percentages of total liquid reserves, indicating tactical, not strategic, allocation at present (company filings, March 2026). Third, commentary from industry figures: Michael Saylor publicly remarked that STRC "could be interesting for a whole class of people," a quote captured in the same Decrypt report (Decrypt, 23 Mar 2026). These three data points — count, position sizing, and market commentary — together paint a picture of initial market testing rather than wholesale substitution of corporate BTC treasuries.
A useful comparison is the adoption curve for bitcoin ETFs in the U.S. between 2020–2024: ETFs moved from novelty to mainstream partly because they satisfied custody and regulatory certainties and amassed tens of billions in AUM within two years of approval. By contrast, STRC adoption among corporates appears measured and concentrated in firms that already maintain active trading and treasury operations. Another comparison: where corporate BTC holdings often represent 50–100% of a firm's liquid crypto assets for heavy adopters in 2021–2025, the STRC allocations reported so far are a fraction — generally low-single-digit share of total liquid assets (company filings, Mar 2026) — underscoring that STRC is being trialed as a complement rather than a replacement.
Liquidity considerations are central. Preferred shares can trade on exchanges with spreads materially wider than spot BTC; market depth for STRC may be limited on off-exchange platforms. That affects mark-to-market volatility and exit costs. For treasuries that value intraday liquidity and immediate convertibility to fiat or BTC, the tradeoff will be explicit: accept spread and counterparty complexity in exchange for any coupon-like features, preferential liquidation rights, or balance-sheet presentation advantages that STRC might deliver.
Sector Implications
If STRC or similar instruments scale across corporate treasuries, several sector-level shifts could follow. First, demand composition for institutional-grade bitcoin exposure may bifurcate: direct BTC holders versus holders of issuer-sponsored equity instruments. ETFs and direct custody would continue to serve investors focused on price capture and custody certainty, while preferred shares could attract treasuries seeking contractual payout features or balance-sheet flexibility. Second, issuance volume and secondary-market liquidity will be critical. Issuers that can market STRC with transparent terms and deliverable liquidity will set the competitive standard; absent that, adoption will remain specialized.
Third, peer effects matter. The Decrypt report referenced three firms adding STRC; if more high-profile treasury holders adopt similar instruments, the signal to smaller corporates could accelerate. Historically, visible corporate behavior — for example, the early 2021 purchases of BTC by high-profile firms — generated a cascade of follow-on demand. That network effect is why even small position sizes by prominent firms can carry outsized signaling value. Fourth, banks and custodians will watch closely. Many depositary banks and financial institutions set internal policies banning holdings of non-fiat liquid instruments; STRC will need to fit into existing custody and settlement rails or prompt policy changes.
For market participants seeking deeper analysis, our institutional research library provides background on how alternative treasury instruments interact with liquidity management frameworks and regulatory accounting — see [topic](https://fazencapital.com/insights/en) for related research on corporate treasury asset allocation and [topic](https://fazencapital.com/insights/en) for comparative analysis of structured crypto instruments.
Risk Assessment
Adoption of STRC raises concentrated risks that treasuries and their boards must assess. Counterparty risk is primary: preferred shares create direct exposure to the issuer's solvency and governance, unlike holding spot BTC where custodial risk is the dominant counterparty consideration. In the event of issuer distress, preferred shareholders may rank behind secured creditors. Second, market liquidity risk can amplify mark-to-market losses; STRC secondary markets may exhibit limited depth, particularly during stressed market conditions when correlated BTC sell-offs increase bid-ask spreads.
Third, accounting and tax risks: depending on feature sets — mandatory dividends, redemption rights, or convertibility — STRC may trigger liability classification under IFRS or U.S. GAAP, impacting leverage ratios and covenant calculations. Firms that have announced STRC positions in Q1 2026 appear to have kept allocations small in part to avoid material accounting reclassifications while auditors and regulators clarify treatment (company filings, Mar 2026). Fourth, reputational and governance risks: investors and stakeholders accustomed to direct BTC holdings for transparency may question why corporate treasuries are using third-party equity instruments for reserve functions.
Fazen Capital Perspective
From a contrarian vantage, STRC's early adoption by a handful of bitcoin-treasury firms should be seen less as a tectonic shift and more as a tactical experimentation phase with asymmetric signalling potential. The economics of preferred shares can look attractive in pass-through scenarios — fixed preferential claims with upside participation — but these are effective only if the issuer maintains robust capitalization and liquid secondary markets. Our view diverges from headline narratives that position STRC as a wholesale substitute for BTC reserves: instead, we expect STRC to be useful as an instrument of nuanced treasury optimization for firms with sophisticated balance-sheet engineering, active treasury desks, and a tolerance for issuer-specific credit exposure.
In practical terms, treasuries considering STRC should model three scenarios: normal market conditions, liquidity stress with a 30–50% BTC drawdown, and issuer-specific stress where STRC spreads widen by 300–500 basis points. For many corporates, the marginal utility of STRC will be limited unless it demonstrably reduces aggregate cost of capital or improves liquidity-adjusted returns versus holding spot BTC and cash. The path to broader adoption likely hinges on standardized documentation, improved secondary-market liquidity, and audit standardization. Fazen Capital research on structured crypto instruments and corporate treasury design is available for institutional clients at [topic](https://fazencapital.com/insights/en).
Outlook
Over the next 6–12 months we expect incremental adoption of STRC-style instruments among corporates that already have active trading programs or sophisticated treasury operations. The key milestones to watch are threefold: 1) clear auditor guidance on balance-sheet classification, 2) transparent secondary-market liquidity metrics reported by issuers, and 3) any regulatory commentary from bodies that oversee corporate disclosure and financial reporting. If these milestones materialize, we could see material increase in position sizes from low-single-digit percentages of liquid reserves to mid-single-digit percentages in 2027 among early adopters.
Conversely, absence of transparency or a negative issuer event would likely stall the product's adoption curve. A stress event that simultaneously compresses BTC liquidity and widens STRC spreads would expose the instrument's fragility and could trigger de-risking across treasuries. For institutional investors monitoring corporate treasury allocations, the appropriate posture is active monitoring of filings and an emphasis on scenario analysis rather than reactionary reallocation.
FAQ
Q: How does STRC differ from a bitcoin ETF for a corporate treasury?
A: STRC is a preferred share issued by a private issuer and creates counterparty exposure to that issuer; ETFs are regulated funds with custodial segregation of underlying BTC and clearer exchange mechanisms. ETFs typically offer deeper liquidity and regulatory oversight, while STRC may offer contractual payout features but less transparent custody and higher issuer-specific credit risk.
Q: Have preferred-share instruments ever been used as corporate treasury reserves in other asset classes?
A: Yes — corporates have occasionally used preferred-equity or preferred-like structures for liquidity management historically (e.g., structured bank instruments or repo-like facilities). The distinguishing factor is scale and regulatory treatment: once such instruments exceed immaterial levels, accounting and regulatory scrutiny intensify, which is a likely constraint on rapid STRC scaling.
Q: What historical event should treasurers model when stress-testing STRC exposure?
A: A reasonable benchmark is the March–May 2020 COVID liquidity shock combined with a sharp crypto drawdown: model a scenario where correlated asset stress reduces liquidity and widens spreads by several hundred basis points in both BTC and issuer instruments. That combination reveals tail correlations and funding vulnerabilities not apparent in normal markets.
Bottom Line
STRC's appearance on corporate balance sheets is a meaningful early indicator of product-market fit in niche treasury strategies, but current position sizes and disclosure practices suggest trialing rather than mass adoption. Institutional investors should prioritize transparency, auditor guidance, and liquidity metrics before concluding STRC represents a durable reshaping of bitcoin-treasury composition.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.
