Digital credit faced its first real stress test this week, as MicroStrategy’s STRC preferred stock crashed, prompting critics to declare the Bitcoin-backed asset class dead.
Bitcoin (BTC) itself has weathered the same obituaries many times before. On-chain data now tells a different story, with network activity climbing to multi-year highs even as the price slides.
What Digital Credit Actually Means
Digital credit is a young class of income-generating securities backed by Bitcoin. Companies holding large Bitcoin reserves issue structured products such as preferred equity and convertible notes.
They use the proceeds to buy more Bitcoin. The aim is straightforward. Long-term BTC appreciation should outpace the dividends and interest those products owe.
Strategy, formerly MicroStrategy, built the clearest example with its STRC preferred stock. STRC has a $100 par value and pays a high, variable yield near 12% per year.
When the shares trade at or above par, Strategy issues more shares and routes the cash into Bitcoin. That mechanism turns STRC demand into BTC on the balance sheet.
Strategy frames the whole stack in plain terms. It calls bitcoin digital capital, STRC digital credit, and its common stock digital equity. The pitch attracted income-focused investors seeking Bitcoin exposure without holding the coin.
They earn a steady yield while Strategy carries the price risk.
Convertible notes and other preferreds follow the same logic. Each one borrows against future Bitcoin gains to buy more BTC today.
From 2025 through 2026, these vehicles became a major source of fresh Bitcoin demand. STRC-linked buying funded far more bitcoin than spot ETFs over the same stretch.
The First Real Stress Test
Critics declared digital credit dead this week, and some of the criticism landed. STRC was marketed as a lower-volatility way to hold Bitcoin exposure.
Instead, it broke par. The preferred shares fell to an intraday low near $82, roughly 18% below $100.
Several pressures hit at once. The asset class is less than a year old, and leveraged STRC positions are unwinding while Bitcoin forms a bottom. Capital is also competing with AI listings and a crowded IPO pipeline.
The wider market mirrors that strain. Total value locked across Decentralized Finance (DeFi) fell from about $170 billion in October 2025 to near $72 billion now.
That marks a drop of more than 55% and signals a broad flight from risk. The selling pressure on STRC did not happen in isolation. The structure also fed on itself. Because STRC trades under par, Strategy has paused new share sales through its market program.
That limits its ability to keep buying Bitcoin, the very engine behind the model. A higher variable dividend, meant to defend par, now reads as a distress signal rather than a reward.
Rival treasury preferreds with higher yields have also pulled capital away. Together these forces explain why critics reached for the word dead. Still, the death call looks premature. Analyst @therationalroot argues that a failure here is very unlikely.
Strategy holds enough cash to cover dividends for at least seven months. Its Bitcoin reserve could fund those same payments for decades.
The market still flinched at one move. In late May, Strategy sold a small batch of bitcoin to fund STRC distributions for the first time. The sale was tiny against its overall holdings. Yet it fed the fear that the model would bend when Bitcoin fell hard.
This remains the first true downturn for an asset class barely a year old. Bitcoin has carried that same dead label through every deep bear market and returned each time.
Bitcoin’s Network Tells the Opposite Story
While digital credit takes its punches, the Bitcoin network looks anything but dead. CryptoQuant’s Network Activity Index broke above its trend for the first time since mid-2024.
It has climbed since January 2026 and has held above trend since late March. That creates a clear divergence, with activity rising while the price falls.
The index measures how heavily the chain gets used, from transaction volume to address activity. A reading above trend points to real expansion rather than a quiet network.
Daily transaction counts and average transactions per block both sit near record highs. The catch sits in the detail.
Transactions below 0.01 BTC now make up about 80% of daily activity, up from under 50% in 2023. Much of the surge comes from OP_RETURN usage tied to Runes and Ordinals inscriptions.
OP_RETURN lets users attach small data to a transaction, which token and inscription projects rely on heavily. These generate large volumes of low-value transactions rather than big economic transfers.
That distinction matters for how the surge gets read. A busy chain is not the same as a chain moving more value.
The mempool has swelled to its highest transaction count since late February 2025. Congestion sits mostly in the low-fee cohorts.
Sustained non-financial activity could raise fees for economic transactions over time. Even so, the core signal stands, and the chain is busier than it has been in years. Michael Saylor has made similar arguments about resilient demand.
A Pulse, Not a Eulogy
Bitcoin trades near $62,400, down about 3% on the day and far from its highs. Both digital credit and the Bitcoin network have been written off before.
The timing tells its own story. Doubts about digital credit grew louder exactly as Strategy’s preferred shares slid below par.
The on-chain numbers cut against that gloom. A network this active rarely fits the picture of a dying asset. That gap between price and usage is the core tension to watch. Falling prices and rising activity rarely sit together for long.
The data suggests both still have a pulse. Whether STRC reclaims par and network activity keeps climbing will decide if this moment marks a bottom or a warning.
The post Is Bitcoin-Backed Digital Credit Dead After MicroStrategy’s STRC Crash? appeared first on BeInCrypto.
