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Bitcoin

Strategy Sells Bitcoin for First Time Since 2022

Why Did Strategy Sell Bitcoin? Strategy sold 32 BTC for about $2.5 million between May 26 and May 31, marking its first bitcoin sale since December 2022 and ending a long stretch in which the

AnonymousCryptoCompass newsroom
June 1, 2026
6 min read
NEWS
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Michael Saylor Signals Potential Bitcoin Purchase by Strategy After Week Long Break

Why Did Strategy Sell Bitcoin?

Strategy sold 32 BTC for about $2.5 million between May 26 and May 31, marking its first bitcoin sale since December 2022 and ending a long stretch in which the company had been defined by continuous accumulation. The sale was disclosed in an 8-K filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Strategy sold the bitcoin at an average price of $77,135 per coin and said the proceeds are expected to be used to fund distributions on preferred stock. The dollar amount is small compared with Strategy’s overall bitcoin position, but the sale matters because of the company’s long-running identity as the largest corporate bitcoin holder and one of the most visible public-market proxies for bitcoin exposure. Any sale, even a limited one, changes how investors read the company’s capital structure and its ability to service preferred stock obligations without relying only on new equity issuance. After the sale, Strategy holds 843,706 BTC, worth about $61 billion at current prices. The company acquired those holdings at an average price of $75,699 per bitcoin, for a total cost of about $63.9 billion including fees and expenses.

How Large Is The Sale Compared With Strategy’s Holdings?

The sale represents only a fraction of Strategy’s bitcoin treasury. The company’s remaining holdings account for more than 4% of bitcoin’s fixed 21 million supply cap, leaving it far ahead of other public companies with bitcoin acquisition models. At current prices, Strategy’s bitcoin position carries an implied paper loss of about $2.9 billion. That figure reflects the gap between the market value of its holdings and the total acquisition cost, not a realized loss. Still, it adds pressure to the company’s valuation debate because investors are watching the relationship between Strategy’s market capitalization, its bitcoin net asset value, and its layered financing programs. The company’s mNAV, a measure comparing its market value with the value of its bitcoin holdings, is currently around 0.97, according to Bitcoin Treasuries data. A sub-1 reading means the market is valuing the company at a slight discount to its bitcoin assets, before fully accounting for liabilities, financing terms, and operating structure. That matters because Strategy’s model depends on market access. The company has used common stock, convertible debt, and preferred stock programs to fund bitcoin purchases and manage obligations. When its stock trades strongly above net asset value, raising capital to buy more bitcoin is easier. When that premium narrows or turns into a discount, the model becomes more sensitive to financing costs and investor confidence.

Investor Takeaway

The sale does not materially reduce Strategy’s bitcoin exposure, but it confirms that the company is willing to use part of its treasury to support preferred stock distributions. That shifts the investor focus from absolute bitcoin accumulation to the durability of Strategy’s financing model.

Was The Bitcoin Sale Expected?

The sale was not a complete surprise. Onchain data had shown that Strategy moved about 411.6 BTC from its Coinbase Prime custody account to a cold wallet address on May 28, increasing market expectations that a sale could occur before the end of 2026. Strategy executives had also said during the company’s first-quarter 2026 earnings call that the firm may sell some bitcoin to fund dividends for STRC, its perpetual preferred stock designed to maintain a $100 par value and offer high yields to investors. Chairman Michael Saylor previously framed such sales as part of a broader accumulation strategy rather than a retreat from bitcoin. He said the company would buy 10 to 20 bitcoin for every 1 bitcoin it sells and clarified that his earlier “never sell” stance meant remaining a net accumulator over time. That explanation gives investors a framework for interpreting the sale, but it does not remove the concern. Strategy has built its market identity around bitcoin accumulation. Selling even a small amount to meet preferred obligations raises questions about whether future distributions, debt management, or weaker market conditions could require more treasury activity.

What Does This Mean For Strategy’s Capital Plan?

Strategy continues to rely on several financing channels. Last week, the company sold 801,994 MSTR shares for about $128.3 million, leaving about $26.1 billion available under its at-the-market program. The filing said no MSTR shares were used to purchase bitcoin during the period. The company has also expanded its ATM programs to include up to an additional $21 billion of MSTR, alongside another $21 billion of STRC preferred stock and $2.1 billion of STRK preferred stock. These programs give Strategy flexibility, but they also increase investor attention on dilution, preferred dividend obligations, and the gap between bitcoin market value and company valuation. Strategy recently repurchased $1.5 billion face value of zero-coupon 2029 convertible notes for about $1.38 billion, retiring the debt at an 8% discount to par. The transaction was funded from its $2 billion cash reserve. As of May 31, the company’s USD Reserve stood at $900 million. The debt repurchase reduced future obligations, while the bitcoin sale supported preferred distributions. Together, those actions show a company actively managing its balance sheet rather than simply buying bitcoin whenever capital is available.

Investor Takeaway

Strategy’s bitcoin sale should be read alongside its preferred stock programs, ATM capacity, and debt repurchase. The core risk is no longer only bitcoin price exposure. It is whether capital markets continue to support the company’s treasury strategy at favorable terms.

How Does Strategy Compare With Other Bitcoin Treasury Firms?

Strategy remains the dominant public bitcoin treasury company by a wide margin. Bitcoin Treasuries data shows that 198 public companies have adopted some form of bitcoin acquisition model, but none come close to Strategy’s 843,706 BTC position. The next largest holders include Twenty One, Metaplanet, MARA, Bitcoin Standard Treasury Company, Bullish, Strive, Coinbase, Riot Platforms, and Cleanspark. Their holdings range from 43,514 BTC to 13,453 BTC, far below Strategy’s total. Still, the broader bitcoin treasury cohort has lost momentum from its summer 2025 peaks. Strategy’s stock is down about 65% from those highs, while some investors have grown more cautious about market-cap-to-net-asset valuation, repeated acquisition programs, and the long-term cost of preferred stock financing. Strategy shares fell 3.1% last week to close Friday at $159.09, but remain up 2.9% year-to-date. Bitcoin dropped about 4.7% over the same period. The small bitcoin sale does not change Strategy’s status as the largest corporate holder of the asset. It does, however, mark a new phase for the company. Investors now have to assess not only how much bitcoin Strategy owns, but how that treasury will be used to fund obligations, manage debt, and preserve access to capital markets when bitcoin price momentum weakens.