QCP warns Strategy’s dividend overhang may cap Bitcoin below $66K even as US-Iran MOU lifts macro sentiment across risk assets.
Bitcoin is lagging the broader macro rally.
Risk assets surged after the US and Iran reached a memorandum of understanding over the weekend. S&P futures opened more than 100 points above Friday’s close.
Crude oil dropped below $75. Yet BTC remains stuck below $66,000. QCP flagged Strategy’s dividend funding pressure as a key reason.
Strategy’s Bitcoin Moves Draw Market Attention
Strategy recently bought back $1.5 billion of its 2029 convertible senior notes.
To stay liquid, the firm raised around $200 million through MSTR share sales and used the proceeds to buy more BTC.
That move extended its cash runway for dividend payments to roughly 7.5 months, according to QCP.
The concern in markets is straightforward. If Strategy exhausts that runway, it may need to sell Bitcoin to meet dividend obligations.
That potential sell pressure is keeping a ceiling on BTC prices even as equities push higher. QCP noted this overhang may continue to limit Bitcoin’s participation in the broader macro optimism.
The firm added that as Strategy keeps issuing shares and extending its runway, the picture could shift.
For now, though, Bitcoin has one very specific weight to work through before it can move with the macro tide.
QCP: Market Worries Strategy May Need to Sell More Bitcoin to Pay Dividends
QCP said the US-Iran MOU has eased energy disruption risks, but BTC remains capped below $66,000 amid concerns that Strategy may need to sell more Bitcoin to fund dividend payments. Strategy has bought… pic.twitter.com/1yCk4I7RhC
— Wu Blockchain (@WuBlockchain) June 17, 2026
US-Iran MOU Reduces One Tail Risk
The US-Iran deal eased one of the more acute risks hanging over global markets.
Under the MOU, both sides are expected to lift blockades on the Strait of Hormuz and reopen key shipping lanes.
Following the signing, both parties enter a 60-day negotiation period. Talks will focus on nuclear issues, sanctions relief, and the unfreezing of Iranian funds.
QCP said the immediate read-through for markets was clear.
Geopolitical risk has not disappeared, but one sharp tail risk moved back from the edge. Crude oil pricing reflects that shift, with markets now pricing in reduced odds of sustained energy disruption.
Energy markets responded quickly. Oil falling below $75 matters for inflation expectations and rate policy. That feeds directly into how traders position across risk assets, including crypto.
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Beyond HODL: What Strategy’s Bitcoin Sale Really Means for Investors
Warsh Faces a Tough Opening Act at the Fed
New Fed Chair Kevin Warsh takes the stage at his first FOMC meeting today.
Markets had previously expected a dovish tilt from Warsh. However, the economic backdrop has since shifted. The US-Iran conflict pushed headline inflation to 4.2% year-over-year, the highest reading in more than three years.
QCP said this leaves Warsh in a difficult position from the start. He must handle sticky inflation while managing a divided Board that remains cautious about the Trump administration’s influence over monetary policy.
The quarterly Dot Plot also releases today. Markets are already pricing in 0.5 rate hikes in 2026 and will watch for any signal that policy stays restrictive near term.
Warsh may carry a dovish reputation into the role. His first meeting, however, is anything but simple.
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