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Policy

Michael Saylor Reports Sale of 32 Bitcoin to Cover Taxes, Strategy Update

Key Points Strategy sold 32 Bitcoin for $2.5M, a minimal portion of its holdings. Filing suggests tax optimization, not shift in long-term treasury strategy. Strategy disclosed in an SEC fili

AnonymousCryptoCompass newsroom
June 1, 2026
3 min read
NEWS
Michael Saylor Reports Sale of 32 Bitcoin to Cover Taxes, Strategy Update
CryptoCompass editorial visual for policy coverage.

Key Points

  • Strategy sold 32 Bitcoin for $2.5M, a minimal portion of its holdings.
  • Filing suggests tax optimization, not shift in long-term treasury strategy.

Strategy disclosed in an SEC filing dated June 1 that it sold 32 Bitcoin (BTC) in late May 2026 for about $2.5 million. The transaction represents less than 0.004% of the company’s total holdings.

The sale comes as Bitcoin fell roughly 2.5% overnight, slipping below the $73,000 level and testing support near $72,000 amid broader market pressure.

Details of the 32 BTC Sale

The filing confirms the disposal of 32 BTC but does not specify which acquisition lots were involved or whether any repurchases occurred. The scale of the sale is small compared with the firm’s overall balance sheet.

Strategy holds more than 818,000 BTC, acquired at an aggregate cost of approximately $51.8 billion and an average price near $75,353 per coin. This accounts for roughly 4% of the total circulating supply of Bitcoin.

The company has previously used tax-loss strategies involving Bitcoin, including a 2022 transaction that realized capital losses while ultimately increasing total holdings. Current U.S. tax rules allow corporations to sell cryptocurrency at a loss without triggering wash-sale restrictions.

In late May, Bitcoin traded near $78,000, potentially enabling tax-loss harvesting on higher-cost positions. The filing does not explicitly state that this was the purpose of the transaction.

Regulatory factors may also influence treasury decisions. The corporate alternative minimum tax on unrealized gains, expected to take effect in 2026, could require selective asset sales, although the document does not confirm this rationale.

Treasury Strategy and Broader Context

During the first quarter of 2026, Strategy reported continued accumulation of Bitcoin, including thousands of BTC acquired through share issuance and other capital-raising mechanisms. Against this backdrop, a 32 BTC sale is quantitatively minor.

Management has indicated a shift toward actively managing Bitcoin per share rather than adhering strictly to a passive holding approach. This framework may involve limited disposals to address tax obligations, dividends, or other corporate requirements.

Two interpretations emerge from the filing. One views the sale as routine tax management with no broader implications for long-term positioning.

Another interpretation considers whether evolving accounting standards, including mark-to-market treatment under ASU 2023-08, and shareholder obligations could gradually normalize small, periodic BTC sales.

The company’s existing capital structure, including at-the-market equity programs and convertible instruments, continues to support overall net accumulation. Within that structure, the 32 BTC transaction appears consistent with measured treasury operations rather than a structural shift in strategy.