Strategy Opens Up to $44.1B in New Sale Programs
Strategy Inc. filed an 8-K on March 23 laying out three new securities sale programs that together total up to $44.1 billion. The company said it may sell up to $21.0 billion of Class A common stock, up to $21.0 billion of STRC preferred stock, and up to $2.1 billion of STRK preferred stock through an expanded group of sales agents.
The filing matters because it materially expands Strategy’s financing capacity while also reshaping how two of its preferred-stock lines are authorized. At the same time, the company added Moelis, A.G.P./Alliance Global Partners, and StoneX as new sales agents under its existing omnibus sales agreement.
What Strategy announced
According to the filing, Strategy entered into joinders with Moelis, Alliance, and StoneX on March 23, adding them as sales agents alongside the banks and broker-dealers already working under its November 2025 omnibus sales agreement. On the same date, the company and its agents entered into three additional program addendums covering new offerings of common stock, STRC preferred stock, and STRK preferred stock.
The key numbers are large. Strategy said the new prospectus supplements cover up to $21.0 billion of common stock, up to $21.0 billion of STRC preferred stock, and up to $2.1 billion of STRK preferred stock. Those programs sit under the company’s existing automatic shelf registration statement that became effective on January 27, 2025.
Key details in the filing
The 8-K makes clear that Strategy is not replacing every existing program at once. The company said it intends to continue using its prior common-stock prospectus and prior STRC preferred-stock prospectus until those shares have been sold in accordance with their terms.
STRK is different. Strategy said that, effective March 22, 2026, it and the agents terminated the prior offering of STRK preferred stock under the earlier STRK prospectus, while simultaneously launching a new STRK program capped at $2.1 billion.
The filing also shows how large the prior registered amounts already were. Strategy said it had previously registered up to about $15.85 billion of common stock, $4.2 billion of STRC preferred stock, and about $20.34 billion of STRK preferred stock under earlier prospectus materials.
How Strategy changed STRC and STRK authorization
Beyond the new sale programs, Strategy also changed the number of authorized shares for two preferred-stock classes. The company filed a certificate of increase for STRC preferred stock, raising authorized shares from 70,435,353 to 282,556,565.
At the same time, it filed a certificate of decrease for STRK preferred stock, cutting authorized shares from 269,800,000 to 40,270,744. That combination suggests Strategy is shifting more financing room toward STRC while tightening the authorized count for STRK after terminating the prior STRK offering. The share-count changes are explicit in the filing; the capital-allocation reading is an inference from those changes.
Why this matters now
This filing is fundamentally about financing flexibility. Strategy has expanded the number of agents that can place its securities and opened three fresh issuance channels under its shelf registration, giving it more room to raise capital across common equity and two preferred structures.
It also shows the company continuing to fine-tune its capital stack instead of relying on just one instrument. The split between common stock, STRC, and STRK gives Strategy multiple ways to access the market depending on pricing, demand, and market conditions. That broader conclusion is an inference, but it follows directly from the three separate addendums and offering caps disclosed in the 8-K.
What we don’t know yet
The filing authorizes and registers the new programs, but it does not say when Strategy will actually sell securities under them, how much it may sell in the near term, or how issuance will be split among the three programs. It also does not commit the company to using the full registered amounts.
Why it matters for crypto
- Strategy now has a much larger registered financing toolkit, which matters because the company is one of the market’s most closely watched crypto-linked public issuers. This article’s company-specific financing facts come from the 8-K; the crypto-market significance is an inference from Strategy’s market profile.
- The filing shows that preferred-stock structures remain a major part of how crypto-adjacent public companies can raise capital, not just common equity.
- By adding Moelis, Alliance, and StoneX, Strategy broadened the distribution network behind its sale programs, which could improve execution flexibility.
- The STRC increase and STRK decrease suggest a live reshaping of the company’s financing mix rather than a static shelf-registration update.
What to watch next
- Whether Strategy begins drawing on the new $21.0 billion common-stock program in the near term. The filing authorizes it, but does not provide a sale schedule.
- Whether the company leans more heavily on STRC than STRK after sharply increasing STRC authorization and reducing STRK authorization.
- Whether future SEC filings disclose early sales under the new common, STRC, or STRK programs.
- How market conditions affect the mix of instruments Strategy chooses to issue under these new programs. This is an inference based on the flexible structure described in the filing.