The cost of the dividends is $1.5 billion per year.
The
present cost of dividends is $1.5 billion per year. Not so long ago it was about half that. And it keeps growing.
He raised $2.5 billion in a week. I don't feel like there's a problem here.
He raised $2.5 billion
during the record-breaking week so far. There have been weeks when he hasn’t raised any money, and other weeks when the price of the preferred has fallen quite a bit.
If bitcoin continues to grow by 20-30% CAGR, then his company not only survives but thrives, and Bitcoin would not have to skyrocket. I don't understand how he can go bankrupt by the dividend obligations when they represent ~2.5% of the total underlying asset value.
First, as of today, Bitcoin CAGR for the past 5 years is 9%. And I’m talking about the last five years because it’s a metric Saylor used to mention a lot when it suited him – when he was at 50% – but he doesn’t talk about it anymore.
As I said before, dividend payments aren’t a fixed figure; they continue to grow. Furthermore, dividends aren’t paid out based on assets, but on profits. A company that has a lot of assets but has been making losses for several years will reduce its dividend, and more often than not, suspend it altogether. What he’s doing is paying dividends based on unrealised profits that he doesn’t have, in the hope that he will have them in the future.
The assets are supposed to cover the principal, not the dividends. In order, they cover STRF, STRC, STRK, STRD and MSTR, not the dividends paid by the preferred shares. If, hypothetically, there were to be a bankruptcy, that would be the order of priority for repayment.
What will he do if, at some point, he can’t raise cash by selling STRC to pay dividends? Sell Bitcoin? That would cause a price crash. Suspend the dividend? More of the same.
We agree that if the price of Bitcoin goes his way, he’ll come out on top, but it could also go very badly for him and he could go bankrupt.