Economy
27-06-2026 14:24
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Ripple CEO Slams Strategy’s Bitcoin Buying Playbook

Why Is Ripple’s CEO Criticizing Strategy?
Ripple CEO Brad Garlinghouse criticized Strategy and Chairman Michael Saylor’s approach to funding bitcoin purchases, arguing that the company’s reliance on financial structuring has distracted from the core driver of digital asset value.
“Financial engineering does not drive long-term value,” Garlinghouse said in a Friday CNBC interview. “Long-term value of any digital asset is going to be driven by utility.”
Garlinghouse said he remains bullish on bitcoin, separating his view of the asset from his criticism of Strategy’s capital-raising model. His argument was aimed at the way Strategy has used preferred shares to fund additional bitcoin purchases, a structure that has come under pressure as bitcoin fell below $60,000 and the company’s securities weakened.
“Team Michael Saylor wasn’t focused on the right stuff and that has hurt the overall market,” Garlinghouse said.
How Did STRC Become The Focus Of The Debate?
Garlinghouse pointed specifically to Strategy’s STRC preferred stock, which is designed around a $100 par value and carries an 11.5% annual dividend. The security recently traded about 25% below that level, a decline he described as a “damning indictment” of Strategy’s approach.
For about a year, Strategy has issued preferred securities such as STRC to raise capital for additional bitcoin purchases. The model works best when investor demand for those securities remains strong and the company can keep raising funds on attractive terms. When the preferred shares trade materially below par, that funding engine becomes harder to operate.
STRC fell to a record low on Thursday, dropping as much as 26% below its $100 par value. Strategy’s common stock also dropped to its lowest level since February 2024 as bitcoin fell to $58,000. The common shares continued to weaken Friday, closing around $82.
The pressure has turned STRC into a market test for Strategy’s broader bitcoin treasury model. The issue is no longer only whether bitcoin rises over time, but whether the company can keep funding purchases while meeting dividend obligations tied to its preferred securities.
Investor Takeaway
Strategy’s bitcoin thesis remains tied to the long-term direction of bitcoin, but the near-term risk sits in its capital structure. STRC trading far below par shows that investors are questioning the efficiency and durability of the company’s preferred-share funding model.
Why Does The Funding Structure Matter?
Strategy’s model has amplified its bitcoin exposure by using capital markets to buy more of the asset. That approach helped the company become one of the most visible corporate bitcoin holders, but it also made the stock more sensitive to both bitcoin price declines and investor appetite for its securities.
Preferred shares are not the same as common equity. They typically carry dividend obligations and are often sold to investors looking for income or structured exposure. In STRC’s case, the 11.5% annual dividend creates an ongoing cash requirement. That becomes more difficult if the company’s liquidity cushion shrinks or if market prices make new issuance unattractive.
CryptoQuant said Strategy should halt bitcoin purchases and rebuild cash reserves. The firm said the dividend coverage cushion behind STRC has fallen from more than 7 years to about 14 months. That estimate has sharpened investor attention on whether Strategy should prioritize balance sheet flexibility over additional bitcoin accumulation.
When STRC trades below $100, Strategy’s ability to issue more preferred shares and use the proceeds for bitcoin purchases becomes less effective. The company can still hold bitcoin, but the mechanism that helped expand those holdings becomes constrained by market pricing.
Is Strategy’s Model Broken Or Just Less Efficient?
The criticism lands during a week of broader pressure on bitcoin-linked equities. Bitcoin traded below $60,000, STRC hit a record low, and Strategy’s common stock fell to levels last seen in early 2024. That combination has raised questions about whether the company’s capital structure is becoming a drag on the market rather than a source of demand.
Not all analysts view the model as broken. Benchmark-StoneX analyst Mark Palmer argued that Strategy’s funding engine has become “less efficient” rather than structurally impaired. He also rejected comparisons between STRC and assets that have collapsed outright.
The distinction matters for investors. A less efficient funding engine means Strategy may have to slow purchases, preserve cash, or wait for stronger market conditions before issuing more securities. A broken model would imply a deeper problem with the company’s ability to sustain its obligations and market premium.
Garlinghouse’s criticism adds a strategic layer to the debate. His view is that crypto markets should be driven by utility rather than capital structure. For Strategy, the counterargument remains that bitcoin itself is the long-term asset and that financial instruments are only tools to accumulate more of it.
The market is now testing which view carries more weight. If bitcoin stabilizes and STRC recovers toward par, Strategy’s model may regain credibility. If preferred shares remain under pressure while dividend coverage narrows, the company’s bitcoin strategy will face more questions from both crypto investors and traditional equity holders.