Strategy sold 3,588 BTC for $216 million. The sale funded dividend payments on four preferred stock offerings. The company still holds 843,775 BTC and $2.55 billion in cash. This is the secon
- Strategy sold 3,588 BTC for $216 million.
- The sale funded dividend payments on four preferred stock offerings.
- The company still holds 843,775 BTC and $2.55 billion in cash.
- This is the second bitcoin sale under the new Digital Credit Capital Framework.
Strategy sold 3,588 BTC for $216 million on July 6, using part of its Bitcoin reserve to fund quarterly and monthly dividend payments across four different preferred stock offerings. Michael Saylor confirmed the transaction on X, noting the sale went toward dividends on the company’s “Digital Credit” securities. Bitcoin itself was sliding at the time, down more than 2% to around $61,961, which made the timing of the sale impossible to ignore for anyone watching the stock.
After the sale, Strategy still holds 843,775 BTC and $2.55 billion in USD reserves. That’s not a small cushion. But the sale itself matters less for its size than for what it represents: a company that spent years insisting it would never sell bitcoin just did it again, and this time in larger quantity than the first.
The Framework That Made This Possible
Strategy adopted a five-part policy called the Digital Credit Capital Framework recently, and it’s what gave the board formal authority to sell bitcoin under specific, pre-approved conditions in the first place. Before this framework existed, selling reserve BTC wasn’t really on the table. The whole pitch to shareholders was permanence – BTC goes in, it doesn’t come out.
The framework flips that. When cash on hand or operating income can’t cover a scheduled obligation, the board can now authorize a Bitcoin sale rather than miss a payment or issue new debt at a bad moment. Every sale still needs board sign-off, which in theory keeps things disciplined. In practice, it sets a precedent that shareholders will be watching every quarter from now on.
The $216 million broke down across four obligations:
- $STRC – the full monthly dividend for June
- $STRF – this quarter’s payment, the largest of the four preferred issues
- $STRE – also due for Q2, though a smaller allocation than STRF
- $STRD – rounds out the quarterly obligations, issued most recently of the four
Four separate obligations, one BTC sale to cover all of them.
MetricValueBTC Reserve (market value)$52,281MBTC Price$61,961BTC Held843,775mNAV1.09USD Reserve$2,550MAnnual Dividends$1,763MBTC Years of Dividend Coverage29.7USD Months of Dividend Coverage17.4Debt$6,754MNet Leverage8%
Why the Panic Doesn’t Quite Match the Numbers
Retail investors tend to react to symbolism more than substance, and this is a textbook case. A company built its entire brand on “we don’t sell.” Now it’s sold twice. So the instinct is to assume something’s wrong underneath – that if the shining example of conviction-holding starts liquidating, the rest of the market must be in worse shape than it looks.
Except 3,588 BTC is less than half a percent of Strategy’s total holdings. The company has enough Bitcoin sitting in reserve to cover dividend payments for close to 30 years without selling another coin, and that’s before touching the $2.55 billion in cash. Net leverage sits at just 8%, which is not the profile of a company under financial stress.
The Part Nobody’s Talking About: Dilution
Here’s the thing Strategy’s playbook doesn’t advertise as loudly. The whole dividend obligation exists because the company keeps issuing new preferred stock – STRC, STRF, STRE, STRD – to raise capital for buying more BTC. Every new issuance means new shares outstanding, and every existing shareholder’s slice of the company gets smaller.
That’s dilution, and it’s not a minor side effect. It’s baked into the business model. Strategy needs fresh capital to keep accumulating Bitcoin at scale, and equity or preferred stock issuance is one of the fastest ways to raise it without piling on more traditional debt. But each round of issuance means the company owes dividends to a larger pool of preferred shareholders, which increases the fixed obligations it has to meet every quarter – obligations that, as of this week, are now partly funded by selling the BTC the strategy was built around holding.
It’s a bit of a loop. Issue stock to buy BTC, pay dividends on that stock, sell some BTC when cash falls short, then issue more stock to keep growing the position. Each step makes sense in isolation. Stacked together, they raise a real question about how much of Strategy’s Bitcoin accumulation is actually accretive to existing shareholders versus how much is just funding an increasingly complex capital structure.
Is This Sustainable Long-Term?
That depends almost entirely on where Bitcoin’s price goes. At current mNAV of 1.09, the market is valuing Strategy’s stock only slightly above the value of its BTC holdings, which gives the company very little room to raise capital through new equity without diluting existing holders more aggressively than they’d like. If Bitcoin keeps climbing, the reserve grows in value faster than the dividend obligations do, and the whole structure holds up fine – the company can cover payments from Bitcoin appreciation alone and rarely needs to sell.
If Bitcoin stagnates or drops for an extended period, the math gets tighter. Fixed dividend payments don’t care what BTC is doing. They come due regardless. A company that’s already selling reserve Bitcoin to make payments during a relatively mild dip is one that could face harder decisions in a prolonged downturn – sell more BTC, issue more dilutive stock, or find some other source of cash. None of those are comfortable options if the price environment stays weak for a year or two rather than a few weeks.
The 29.7-year Bitcoin coverage figure sounds reassuring, but it’s calculated at current prices. If Bitcoin drops 50%, that coverage number drops with it. The framework itself isn’t the risk – it’s a sensible tool for a company managing this kind of balance sheet. The risk is what happens if the market assumes Strategy’s dividend obligations are permanently safe simply because they’ve been safe so far.
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