Bernstein analysts have formally compared Strategy Inc. to a central bank for Bitcoin, and the framing is not as provocative as it sounds.
The investment firm’s report, led by analyst Gautam Chhugani, argues that Strategy has moved well beyond a corporate treasury play and into something closer to a systemic institutional pillar in the Bitcoin market. At $73,510 per BTC at the time of writing, the implications of that argument carry real weight.
The central bank comparison rests on a specific mechanism. Central banks stabilize currencies and financial systems by acting as buyers of last resort during stress periods, absorbing sell pressure that would otherwise destabilize markets. Bernstein argues Strategy plays an analogous role for Bitcoin.
The evidence for that argument starts with scale. Strategy now holds 761,068 BTC, acquired for approximately $57.61 billion at a blended average of $75,696 per coin, as covered in earlier reporting today. That position represents a meaningful share of Bitcoin’s fixed supply. When Strategy continues buying during periods of geopolitical turmoil or market weakness, as it has done consistently, it introduces a structural bid that retail-driven markets do not have.
According to report by The Block, Bernstein also points to the broader institutional ownership picture. Spot Bitcoin ETFs now control approximately 6.1% of total supply. Combined with corporate treasuries led by Strategy, a growing share of Bitcoin’s circulating supply is sitting in hands that are structurally less likely to sell during volatility. That changes the market’s behavior in ways that were not present during earlier cycles when retail dominance made sharp drawdowns both more frequent and more severe.
Strategy’s accumulation does not come from operating cash flow. It comes from sophisticated capital markets activity, and Bernstein specifically highlights the STRC preferred stock as a key instrument. STRC, internally referred to as “Stretch,” is a perpetual preferred share offering an 11.5% monthly dividend. The investors it attracts are income-focused institutions whose capital flows directly into Bitcoin purchases. It is a mechanism for converting fixed-income appetite into BTC exposure at scale.
That financial architecture is what separates Strategy from a company that simply bought Bitcoin and held it. The firm has built a structure that continuously channels new institutional capital into accumulation, independent of its equity price performance or operating results. Bernstein describes this as “hyper-scaling” and frames it as one of the more significant financial innovations in the institutional crypto space.
The balance sheet reflects the result. Strategy holds approximately $57 billion in Bitcoin and liquid cash against roughly $17 billion in debt. That leverage ratio, while significant, is structured against a fixed-supply asset with no counterparty risk, which Bernstein views as fundamentally different from traditional corporate debt structures.
What makes the Bernstein report more than a note about one company is the evidence that Strategy’s approach is being replicated internationally at a pace that is accelerating.
Metaplanet, the Japanese firm frequently described as Asia’s MicroStrategy, raised $255 million today and now has $531 million in total firepower directed toward a goal of 210,000 BTC. Strive Inc. made a structurally significant move by investing $50 million directly into Strategy’s STRC preferred shares to back its own dividend obligations. That is the first known instance of one major Bitcoin treasury company using another’s fixed-income product, a development that begins to look like the early formation of an interconnected institutional Bitcoin financial system rather than a collection of independent corporate bets.
Bitmine’s 61,000 ETH purchase, also disclosed today, sits adjacent to this trend. The firm’s chairman Tom Lee has framed its Ethereum accumulation using similar macro hedging language to what drives Bitcoin treasury strategies, suggesting the institutional treasury model is extending beyond BTC into the broader digital asset market.
The Bernstein report is not a price prediction. It is a structural argument about how Bitcoin’s ownership base has changed and what that means for market stability going forward. The combination of ETF inflows locking up supply, corporate treasuries adding continuously, and the financial products layered on top of those positions is creating a demand profile that is qualitatively different from anything that existed in prior cycles.
Whether that structure is as resilient as Bernstein suggests depends on factors that remain untested, including how these positions perform during a prolonged bear market and whether the leverage embedded in Strategy’s balance sheet becomes a vulnerability rather than a tool. Those are legitimate questions the report does not fully resolve.
What is not really in dispute is the scale. One company holding 761,068 BTC, running a preferred stock program that funds continuous accumulation, and being replicated by institutions in Japan, the United States, and beyond is a different kind of market participant than anything Bitcoin has seen before.
The post Bernstein Calls Strategy a Bitcoin Central Bank: The Data Behind That Claim Is Hard to Dismiss appeared first on ETHNews.


