Strategy Bitcoin debt repurchase lifts yield to 13.3% as BTC buying pauses

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Strategy Bitcoin debt repurchase

Strategy Bitcoin debt repurchase is doing more than trimming liabilities. It is also giving investors a clearer view of how the company is managing its balance sheet while keeping its huge Bitcoin position intact, even as it paused new buying in the latest reported week.

At the center of the update is a financing move with a direct effect on Strategy’s Bitcoin yield. The company completed the repurchase of $1.5 billion of convertible notes due 2029, and it did so at roughly an 8% discount to face value. That helped lower debt more efficiently and lifted a key internal metric at the same time.

The repurchase added 0.7 percentage points to Strategy’s Bitcoin yield, pushing its 2026 year-to-date Bitcoin yield to 13.3%. Meanwhile, the company did not buy additional Bitcoin in the week ended May 25, leaving one of the market’s most closely watched corporate Bitcoin holdings unchanged.

Debt repurchase lifts Bitcoin yield

Strategy’s latest capital move centered on $1.5 billion of convertible notes due 2029, which it repurchased at about an 8% discount to face value.

The immediate result was a lower debt load. Total debt fell to $6.7 billion after the transaction, giving the company a cleaner balance sheet while preserving its existing Bitcoin exposure.

That balance-sheet shift also carried a Bitcoin-specific outcome. The deal added 0.7 percentage points to Strategy’s Bitcoin yield, and the company’s 2026 year-to-date Bitcoin yield rose to 13.3%.

Why this matters is straightforward: for a company so closely tied to Bitcoin, financing decisions are not separate from its crypto strategy. Retiring debt at a discount can strengthen the company’s financial position without forcing it to sell Bitcoin or raise fresh capital for a new purchase. In practice, that makes the Strategy Bitcoin debt repurchase more than a routine liability-management event.

It also shows that, at least in this period, Strategy found value in improving its balance sheet rather than expanding it further.

Bitcoin holdings stay unchanged

For the week ended May 25, Strategy did not buy additional Bitcoin.

Its holdings therefore remained unchanged at 843,738 BTC, a figure that keeps the company firmly in focus for investors watching corporate Bitcoin holdings. The pause in accumulation stands out because Strategy is often tracked for its buying activity as much as for its financing moves.

Still, the lack of a fresh purchase did not mean a lack of progress in its reported Bitcoin metrics. The 2026 year-to-date Bitcoin yield rose to 13.3%, helped by the debt repurchase.

That distinction matters. The company’s latest update suggests that changes in shareholder-facing Bitcoin performance measures can come from capital structure decisions, not just from adding more coins. For Bitcoin-focused investors, that links treasury strategy directly to how the company presents progress.

What the Bitcoin holdings represent

Strategy’s unchanged Bitcoin stack of 843,738 BTC was acquired for about $63.87 billion.

That puts the average acquisition price at roughly $75,700 per Bitcoin, offering a simple snapshot of the scale and cost basis behind the company’s position.

  • $1.5 billion of convertible notes due 2029 were repurchased
  • Total debt was reduced to $6.7 billion
  • Bitcoin holdings stayed at 843,738 BTC, acquired for about $63.87 billion at an average price of roughly $75,700 per Bitcoin

The broader takeaway is that Strategy did two things at once: it improved its balance sheet and held the line on Bitcoin accumulation. That combination may draw attention because it shows a company still deeply committed to Bitcoin, but increasingly willing to use financial engineering and debt management, not just relentless buying, to shape the next phase of its strategy.

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