A persistent discount on a yield instrument usually signals trouble. But according to JAN3 CEO Samson Mow, the STRC preferred security is doing exactly what it was designed to do when it trades below its $100 par value. The comments, captured in a report from WuBlockchain , push back against the idea that Strategy needs to step in and support the price. Instead, the mechanics of STRC itself create a self-repairing loop that rewards buyers the further the price falls.
That loop runs on two straightforward incentives. Lower trading prices lift the effective dividend yield for new buyers because the fixed cash distribution becomes a larger percentage of the purchase price. At the same time, a discount to par builds in a capital gain runway if the security ever returns to its liquidation preference—or if Strategy redeems it at face value. Mow argued that the pull-to-par math is strong enough to attract natural demand without any corporate buyback program.
Yield and pull-to-par mechanics in practice
STRC, part of the family of structured instruments Strategy has issued to fund its Bitcoin acquisition, carries a set dividend and a $100 liquidation value. When secondary market trading pushes the price down to, say, $80, the yield on cost jumps. An investor buying at that level not only captures a higher current payout than the stated coupon suggests but also locks in a potential 25% upside if the price migrates back toward par. That asymmetric payoff is the self-repairing engine Mow described.
Because the discount does not reduce the actual dividends paid by Strategy, the instrument’s income stream remains intact. The only variable is the market’s pricing of that stream. Mow’s point is that the design channels market anxiety into a pricing mechanism that simultaneously makes the security more attractive. No third party needs to intervene. The discount itself becomes the catalyst for demand.
This dynamic echoes a broader market theme. Yield-bearing crypto-adjacent assets—whether tokenized Treasuries, liquid staking derivatives, or on-chain credit products—are increasingly judged by their capacity to auto-correct mispricing. The tokenization trend has forced traditional structures to prove they can function without constant human governance, a shift documented in recent real-world asset milestones .
What this means for Strategy and holders
If Mow’s reading is correct, Strategy faces no pressure to defend STRC’s market price through repurchases or restructuring. That frees up capital and attention for its core Bitcoin treasury operations. However, it also places the burden squarely on existing holders to understand the instrument’s mechanics. A holder who bought near par and sells at a discount crystallizes a loss that a patient buyer can later capture. The self-repairing feature works only if the marginal investor is focused on total return rather than panic-selling a paper markdown.
Not everyone will draw comfort from the argument. A steep and persistent discount can still sour sentiment among investors who expected the security to trade near par. And while the yield incentive grows mathematically, it competes for capital against other high-yield instruments, including tokenized private credit and staking yields that have drawn institutional attention, as noted in the recent SUI staking surge .
Whether the self-repairing thesis holds in a prolonged risk-off environment remains an open question. The mechanism depends on buyers willing to bet on normalization. If credit spreads widen or Bitcoin sentiment deteriorates sharply, the discount could deepen faster than the yield logic attracts fresh capital. But Mow’s framing treats that risk as a feature, not a flaw—the discount simply grows until it reaches a level where buyers cannot ignore the math.
The bigger picture for structured crypto equity
Strategy’s preferred offerings have become a case study in how corporations deep in digital assets access public markets. The structure is meant to channel yield-hungry capital without diluting common shareholders or selling Bitcoin. In that context, any mechanism that reduces the need for active management makes the vehicle more scalable. The self-repairing narrative fits a market that increasingly values automated incentives over discretionary intervention.
The broader blockchain ecosystem is no stranger to algorithmic rebalancing and incentive layers—automated market makers, overcollateralized lending, and liquid staking all rely on similar pull-to-reference logic. Against that backdrop, STRC’s design looks less like an anomaly and more like a traditional finance adaptation of an idea crypto users already understand. The intersection of structured equity and blockchain-native mechanics is a space active developer ecosystems continue to explore.
For now, the takeaway for market participants is practical: the discount on STRC is not a failure signal. It is the mechanism recalibrating for the next buyer. Whether that holds through volatility will test the thesis in real time, but the architecture does not require a savior.

