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Michael Saylor’s “Infinite Money Glitch”: Could STRC Push Bitcoin Toward $1 Million? - Crypto Economy
The cryptocurrency ecosystem is entering a structural transformation that goes far beyond simple adoption of digital assets. Increasingly, the real shift is happening in the financial architecture being built around those assets. This narrative was recently popularized by the YouTube channel Altcoin Daily, whose analysts suggested that Michael Saylor may have discovered what some investors are calling an “infinite money glitch”—a mechanism that converts cheap debt into accelerated accumulation of Bitcoin.
At the center of this thesis is the company Strategy, which has gradually evolved from a software firm into something closer to a Bitcoin-focused financial vehicle. The latest instrument powering this strategy is STRC (Variable Rate Series A Perpetual Stretch Preferred Stock), a preferred equity product designed to attract institutional capital by offering returns significantly higher than traditional fixed-income assets.
The concept is simple but powerful. Strategy raises capital through STRC by offering investors an attractive yield and then deploys that capital to purchase Bitcoin at scale. In doing so, Bitcoin becomes more than just a speculative asset—it becomes the collateral for a new credit-based financial structure.
This is precisely why the Altcoin Daily analysis has gained traction among market observers. The story is no longer just about Bitcoin price speculation, but about building a new financial infrastructure on top of the asset itself.
STRC and the yield arbitrage strategy
The appeal of STRC largely stems from a classic opportunity in financial markets: yield arbitrage. While U.S. 10-year Treasury bonds continue to offer returns close to 4% annually, Strategy’s preferred instrument currently provides an annualized dividend of around 11.50% as of March 2026, adjusted monthly to keep the share price near its $100 par value.
For institutional investors searching for stable yield, this difference is significant. Many funds are unwilling to directly hold Bitcoin due to its volatility, but they remain eager for predictable cash-flow-generating assets. STRC is designed to fill exactly that gap.
The mechanism works in straightforward terms. Strategy pays investors roughly an 11.5% yield while allocating that capital to Bitcoin purchases, betting that the asset’s long-term performance will far exceed that cost of capital. Saylor himself has repeatedly suggested that Bitcoin could deliver annualized returns between 20% and 30% over the long term.
If that scenario materializes, the spread between the cost of capital and Bitcoin’s appreciation effectively becomes additional Bitcoin accumulation for the company. This dynamic is what analysts often describe as the real engine behind Strategy’s rapidly expanding Bitcoin treasury.
Another key feature making STRC appealing to conservative capital is its relatively low volatility. The instrument has reportedly shown around 3% volatility over a 30-day period, dramatically lower than Bitcoin’s typical price swings. This characteristic transforms a highly volatile digital asset into a relatively stable financial product suitable for institutional portfolios.

The institutional race for Bitcoin supply
The effects of this strategy are already visible in the numbers. In the first 68 days of 2026 alone, Strategy acquired 66,231 BTC, already surpassing the company’s total purchases in several previous years.
On March 9, 2026, the company reported another major acquisition of 17,994 BTC worth approximately $1.28 billion, purchased at an average price near $70,946 per coin. With that transaction, Strategy’s total holdings climbed to roughly 738,731 BTC, representing about 3.5% of Bitcoin’s total supply.
This aggressive accumulation has fueled what analysts increasingly describe as an institutional race to control Bitcoin supply.
One of the most notable competitors in that race is financial giant BlackRock, whose spot ETF iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT) currently holds approximately 775,156 BTC under management. While BlackRock still maintains the lead, Strategy’s purchasing pace has accelerated dramatically thanks to funding mechanisms like STRC.
The imbalance becomes even clearer when compared with Bitcoin’s natural supply dynamics. Following the most recent halving, the network produces around 450 new BTC per day through mining rewards.
Yet in periods of strong liquidity, analysts estimate that Strategy could potentially acquire up to 5,700 BTC per day, a level of demand that far exceeds the network’s daily issuance.
In practical terms, a single institutional buyer could absorb multiple times the new supply entering the market each day.
The 42/42 plan and the expansion strategy
Behind this rapid accumulation lies a broader strategic framework known as the 42/42 Plan. Under this initiative, Strategy aims to raise approximately $84 billion between 2026 and 2027, divided evenly between $42 billion in equity and $42 billion in convertible debt.
Every dollar raised under this plan is intended for one purpose: acquiring more Bitcoin.
Early market signals suggest strong investor appetite for the strategy. On March 10, 2026, STRC recorded around $409 million in trading volume in a single session, an unusually high level of liquidity for a relatively new preferred equity instrument.
At the same time, other companies are beginning to adopt the product within their own financial strategies. Asset management firm Strive recently announced that it had added $50 million worth of STRC to its corporate treasury, suggesting that the instrument may be evolving into something resembling a yield-bearing “crypto bond” for institutional portfolios.
If this trend continues, the model could expand beyond a single company. Regional banks, wealth managers, and institutional intermediaries could purchase STRC and redistribute it to their clients, offering slightly lower yields but still significantly outperforming traditional fixed-income products.

Final reflection
Michael Saylor’s strategy represents far more than an aggressive corporate bet on Bitcoin. At its core, it is a large-scale financial engineering experiment designed to transform a digital asset into the foundation of a global credit system.
If the model proves sustainable, Bitcoin could evolve from a speculative asset into a settlement layer and collateral base for modern financial markets. Yet the system also relies on a single foundational assumption: that Bitcoin will continue appreciating over the long term.
Financial history is filled with innovations that once appeared unstoppable—until they weren’t. But it is also filled with moments when a new financial infrastructure permanently reshaped the global economy.
The real question emerging in today’s markets may no longer be whether Bitcoin can eventually reach $1 million per coin, but whether the financial machinery Saylor is building could accelerate that trajectory far sooner than most investors currently expect.
Disclaimer: This article has been written for informational purposes only. It should not be taken as investment advice under any circumstances. Before making any investment in the crypto market, do your own research.