Strategy (MSTR) Stock Drops to $190 After Reporting $12.54B Q1 Loss From Bitcoin Decline

Table of Contents MicroStrategy (MSTR) disclosed a devastating $12.54 billion quarterly loss for the opening three months of 2026. The massive shortfall stemmed almost exclusively from a $14.46 billion non-cash impairment related to its extensive bitcoin portfolio. Strategy Earnings Hit by Bitcoin Drop 🪙$MSTR posted a heavy Q1 loss as $BTC fell sharply, but Bitcoin’s rebound above $80K could shift focus to a stronger Q2 setup 📊 pic.twitter.com/t1AU1UVFek — CoinCentral (@realcoincentral) May 6, 2026 Shares of MSTR surged to $190 during Tuesday’s session—marking the highest valuation since mid-November—though they retreated by 1% when after-hours trading commenced. Strategy Inc, MSTR The flagship digital asset experienced a severe downturn, sliding from approximately $87,000 at the start of January to around $68,000 by the close of March. This represents a decline exceeding 25% within a single quarter. Under the leadership of Executive Chairman Michael Saylor, the enterprise maintains the world’s largest corporate bitcoin reserve. The current holdings total 818,334 BTC, accumulated at an average acquisition cost of $75,537 each. With bitcoin’s trading price hovering near $81,000 presently, the aggregate position carries a market value of approximately $66.82 billion. This translates to an unrealized profit approaching $5 billion. The company concluded Q1 with cash reserves of $2.25 billion, sufficient to support preferred stock dividend obligations for roughly 18 months. Company leadership highlighted the strong performance of preferred instrument STRC during the quarter. Chief Executive Phong Le described it as a “big success,” emphasizing robust investor appetite, substantial trading volume, and minimal price fluctuation. STRC operates with a design intended to maintain trading close to a $100 benchmark value, featuring a variable dividend presently delivering an 11.5% annualized return. Proceeds from STRC sales fund additional bitcoin acquisitions. Since January, STRC alone contributed $5.58 billion of the company’s aggregate $11.68 billion capital raise in 2026. Management now identifies STRC as the dominant “engine” powering its routine bitcoin accumulation strategy. Across all preferred securities—STRC, STRK, STRF, and STRD—Strategy has distributed over $692 million in cumulative dividends to shareholders. Skeptics question the sustainability of this approach. Detractors have characterized the structure as “circular,” with some critics applying the Ponzi scheme label. Supporters counter that it represents an innovative mechanism for directing yield-oriented capital toward bitcoin market exposure. Analysts at Grayscale have observed that spot bitcoin exchange-traded funds offer the “cleanest” access to cryptocurrency exposure without the intricacies inherent in preferred stock frameworks. Five weeks into the second quarter, bitcoin has rebounded beyond $80,000. Strategy maintained its acquisition program throughout this recovery period. Should current price levels persist, the organization could report substantial profits for the April through June quarter—representing a dramatic turnaround from Q1’s performance. MSTR shares have advanced nearly 20% year-to-date, despite remaining more than 50% below their value from twelve months ago. With first-quarter results largely anticipated by market participants, focus now shifts to the 5 p.m. Eastern earnings conference call, where Saylor and executives are expected to reveal strategic initiatives. Bitcoin touched a three-month peak near $82,000 on Tuesday.