Strategy, led by Michael Saylor, has launched an interactive credit model that allows investors to calculate the resilience of its debt obligations in real time. The release came just two days after the company officially confirmed the sale of 3,588 $BTC worth $216 million to secure dollar liquidity and payments on preferred shares.
The publication of the simulator seems to be Michael Saylor's direct response to renewed Wall Street discussions about the risks of his business model, designed to show analysts exactly how many years the company can hold out without a Bitcoin rally.
Digital Credit is transparent because the principal market risk factor is Bitcoin, an observable, homogeneous asset. Analysts can assess $BTC-related credit risk continuously, and investors can apply their own statistical models to inform valuation and trading decisions. $STRC pic.twitter.com/6Xo63MEmeM
— Michael Saylor (@saylor) July 9, 2026
Another goal might be a demonstration that controlled monetization of reserves is part of a new systemic capital architecture, the Digital Credit Capital Framework, rather than an emergency rescue from a shortage of funds.
The math behind Strategy's 30-year dividend buffer
The baseline parameters entered into the interface clearly show the current limits of the capital structure's resilience and answer the key question: What happens if Bitcoin completely stops growing?
- A 30-year payment reserve: The key $BTC Years of Dividends metric shows that even if market growth stops completely, the company's existing crypto reserves worth $52.87 billion and accumulated dollar cushion, the USD Reserve, of $2.55 billion would be enough for exactly 30 years of uninterrupted payments on dividend obligations.
- 3.33% for perpetual breakeven: The $BTC Breakeven ARR metric shows that, for stable servicing of all coupons and dividends without raising new capital, the market does not even need an aggressive rally. Bitcoin only needs to rise by an average of 3.33% per year.
- A twofold coverage ratio: Total obligations on convertible bonds ($6.714 billion) and preferred shares ($15.464 billion) amount to $22.178 billion. At the same time, the current asset coverage indicator, $BTC Rating, stands at 2.7x, which guarantees the safety of payments to investors even in the event of a prolonged market correction.
For a long time, Michael Saylor's strategy was built on uncompromising Bitcoin accumulation, but the launch of the STRC debt instrument changed the rules of the game. By July, the volume-weighted average market price of STRC shares had fallen below the $100 par value, forcing the company to raise the dividend rate to 12.00% in order to protect the market price.
Payments at such rates require a regular inflow of fiat, which is why Strategy used the $BTC monetization program of up to $1.25 billion approved by its board of directors.
Instead of classic passive holding, Saylor has moved to flexible asset management. In this context, the interactive model appears designed to strip traditional agencies, such as S&P with their "junk" ratings for the company, of their monopoly on risk assessment and to clearly show investors the transparent mathematics of debt sustainability in conditions where the crypto market is not constantly growing.