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Policy

Strategy Cuts Bitcoin Holdings to 843,775 BTC After $216…

Why Did Strategy Sell Bitcoin? Strategy sold 3,588 BTC for approximately $216 million last week, marking a notable shift for the world’s largest corporate bitcoin holder as it used part of it

AnonymousCryptoCompass newsroom
July 6, 2026
6 min read
NEWS
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Strategy's Saylor Takes Aim at Ethereum Yield Model

Why Did Strategy Sell Bitcoin?

Strategy sold 3,588 BTC for approximately $216 million last week, marking a notable shift for the world’s largest corporate bitcoin holder as it used part of its crypto reserve to fund preferred stock distributions and rebuild its dollar liquidity buffer. The company said in an SEC filing that it sold 1,363 BTC for $80.8 million between June 29 and June 30 at an average price of $59,256 per bitcoin. It sold another 2,225 BTC for $135.2 million between July 1 and July 5 at an average price of $60,773. The proceeds were used to pay distributions on preferred stock and replenish part of the company’s USD reserve, which stood at $2.55 billion as of July 5. The move follows Strategy’s recent adoption of a Digital Credit Capital Framework, which requires its dollar reserve to be used only for preferred stock dividends and interest payments. For investors, the sale matters because Strategy has long been treated as a one-way corporate bitcoin accumulator. The latest filing shows the company is now prepared to monetize part of its holdings when its capital structure requires liquidity, even while it remains heavily exposed to bitcoin.

How Large Are Strategy’s Remaining Bitcoin Holdings?

Strategy still holds 843,775 BTC, worth around $52.3 billion at current prices. The company acquired those holdings at an average price of $74,476 per bitcoin, for a total cost of about $63.7 billion, including fees and expenses, according to co-founder and executive chairman Michael Saylor. That leaves the company with holdings equal to more than 4% of bitcoin’s 21 million supply cap. It also leaves Strategy carrying roughly $11.4 billion in paper losses at current prices, based on the difference between the market value of its bitcoin and its aggregate purchase cost. The latest sale does not meaningfully reduce Strategy’s dominant position among corporate bitcoin holders. It does, however, change how investors may read the company’s treasury strategy. Bitcoin is no longer only an asset being accumulated. It is also a liquidity source tied to preferred dividends, interest obligations, reserve coverage, and potential buybacks. Strategy said it recorded an $8.32 billion loss on digital assets during the second quarter, including an $8.31 billion unrealized loss and a $0.9 million realized loss. Because the market value of its bitcoin fell below its purchase cost at quarter-end, the company also said it will fully offset the related deferred tax benefit with a valuation allowance.

Investor Takeaway

Strategy remains a leveraged bitcoin proxy, but the sale introduces a new investor question: whether bitcoin will be used more often as a funding tool when preferred stock obligations, credit securities, or reserve targets require cash.

What Does The Digital Credit Framework Change?

Strategy’s new Digital Credit Capital Framework gives its balance sheet a more formal liquidity structure. The company’s board-approved policy requires the USD reserve to cover at least 12 months of preferred stock dividends and interest payments. The reserve rose to $2.55 billion from $1.4 billion a week earlier. The company also authorized a $1 billion Digital Credit Securities Repurchase Program covering STRC, STRF, STRD, and STRK, with STRC expected to be the initial priority. A new STRC Dividend Policy gives management discretion to review the dividend rate monthly based on market conditions, bitcoin prices, credit spreads, reserve coverage, and other factors. STRC had previously been a key funding tool for Strategy’s bitcoin acquisitions and currently carries an annualized rate of 12%. But it has struggled to regain its $100 par value since mid-May, limiting its usefulness as a funding channel for fresh bitcoin purchases. STRC closed at $87.87 on Thursday after previously falling to $71.25 as bitcoin dropped below $60,000. Strategy also approved a separate $1 billion Class A common stock repurchase program, which will not be funded from the USD reserve. In addition, it introduced a BTC Monetization Program that allows the company to sell bitcoin to raise up to $1.25 billion for the reserve, preferred stock dividends and interest payments, or repurchases of digital credit securities and common stock. The full capacity remained available as of July 5, the company said.

Does The Sale Create New Risk For Bitcoin Markets?

The formal bitcoin sale policy introduces a more complex market profile for Strategy. The company has historically been viewed as a major source of corporate bitcoin demand. A policy that allows bitcoin sales means it can also become a source of supply when balance sheet needs require cash. Analysts at JPMorgan described the shift as creating “avoidable two-way risk” because Strategy may now act as both a buyer and seller of bitcoin. That does not imply forced selling is imminent, but it changes the market’s reading of Strategy’s role. Its treasury model is now tied not only to bitcoin conviction, but also to credit spreads, dividend obligations, reserve policy, and investor demand for its securities. Other analysts have argued that forced selling remains unlikely because of Strategy’s balance sheet position. The company has still bought about 175,000 BTC for roughly $14 billion so far in 2026, keeping it far ahead of other public companies that have adopted bitcoin treasury models. Per Bitcoin Treasuries data, 197 public companies have adopted some form of bitcoin acquisition strategy. Tether-backed Twenty One, Metaplanet, MARA, and Bitcoin Standard Treasury Company make up the rest of the top 5, with 43,514 BTC, 43,000 BTC, 36,303 BTC, and 30,021 BTC, respectively.

Investor Takeaway

The market risk is not that Strategy has abandoned bitcoin. The risk is that its capital structure now makes bitcoin sales part of the toolkit, which could weigh on sentiment during periods of weak prices, stressed credit spreads, or pressure on preferred securities.

How Are Markets Reading Strategy’s Shift?

Bitcoin dropped about 2% on Monday after the filing. Strategy shares were also down in pre-market trading, although the stock had gained 21.1% overall last week following the Digital Credit Capital Framework announcement. The stock closed Thursday at $100.77 but remains sharply lower over the past year. The market reaction shows the tension in Strategy’s model. Investors may welcome a larger reserve, a more formal credit framework, and buyback capacity, but bitcoin sales challenge the company’s long-running accumulation narrative. Saylor continued to frame bitcoin as the company’s central asset, posting another acquisition tracker chart with the caption, “Bitcoin is digital energy.” He also argued that bitcoin’s next growth phase will be driven less by protocol changes and halving cycles and more by institutional capital, credit markets, and financial infrastructure around the network. That argument remains central to Strategy’s investment case. The company is trying to turn bitcoin holdings into a broader capital markets structure supported by preferred stock, credit securities, reserves, buybacks, and selective monetization. The immediate test is whether investors view that as financial discipline or as a sign that the bitcoin treasury model is becoming harder to manage when prices fall below cost basis.