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Strategy Breaks Its Four-Year Bitcoin Buying Streak With a Surprise Sale

Strategy sold 32 Bitcoin for $2.5 million to fund preferred stock dividends. It's the company's first sale since December 2022. MSTR stock dropped 6%. A Polymarket trader won $200,000 betting it would happen.

Salar Salek by Salar Salek
June 2, 2026
in Bitcoin
Strategy Breaks Its Four-Year Bitcoin Buying Streak With a Surprise Sale

For five years, Strategy was the one constant in Bitcoin’s chaotic universe. Markets crashed. Competitors folded. Regulators attacked. And through it all, Michael Saylor’s company kept buying. Never selling. Never wavering. Never even hinting that the stack might shrink.

On June 1, 2026, the company filed a Form 8-K with the SEC confirming it sold 32 Bitcoin between May 26 and May 31. Average price: $77,135. Total proceeds: approximately $2.5 million. Purpose: funding preferred stock dividend obligations.

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MSTR stock dropped over 6% in premarket trading to $149.75, its lowest level in more than a year. The shares have now fallen by over 60% from their highs. Bitcoin, already sliding, broke below $72,000 within hours of the filing.

Thirty-two coins. Two and a half million dollars. Against a stack of 843,706 BTC worth roughly $61 billion. By the numbers, it’s nothing. By the narrative, it’s everything.

The company that turned “never sell” into a corporate religion just committed what its most devoted followers would call heresy.

Why Strategy Sold

The filing makes the reason clear: dividends.

Strategy built its Bitcoin treasury partly by issuing preferred stock, financial instruments that pay regular cash dividends to their holders. The company currently carries five separate series of preferred stock with annual yields ranging from 8% to 11.5%.

On May 30, one day before the sale was disclosed, the board declared dividends across all five series payable on June 30:

STRF (Strife) at 10% annually. STRC (Stretch) at 11.5%. STRK (Strike) at 8%. STRD (Stride) at 10%. STRE (Stream) at 10% in euros.

These instruments were the mechanism Strategy used to raise capital for Bitcoin purchases without diluting common shareholders. The pitch was elegant: issue preferred stock, use the money to buy Bitcoin, let Bitcoin appreciate, and fund the dividends from the growing treasury value. As long as Bitcoin kept going up, the math worked beautifully.

Bitcoin didn’t keep going up. It fell from $126,000 to $71,400. And the dividends still need to be paid in cash, regardless of where Bitcoin trades.

The $900 Million Question

Here’s the part that doesn’t quite add up. Strategy maintains a $900 million USD reserve specifically designated to cover preferred stock dividends and interest on debt. That reserve was established in December 2025 as a management-designated liquidity pool.

If the company has $900 million in cash sitting in a reserve designed for exactly this purpose, why sell $2.5 million in Bitcoin?

The answer lies in what Saylor said three weeks ago during the Q1 earnings call. He described a potential Bitcoin sale as “inoculation.” The idea wasn’t to raise money. It was to establish a precedent. To prove that Strategy could sell a small amount of Bitcoin, that the world wouldn’t end, and that the company could continue operating normally afterward.

“Just to send the message that we did it,” he said.

CEO Phong Le reinforced the framing during the same call. “Ultimately, I believe in math over ideology,” he said. “We will sell Bitcoin when it’s advantageous to the company.”

The 32-coin sale was the inoculation. The message it sends is that selling is now part of the toolkit. Strategy is no longer a one-way trade. It’s a two-way operation that buys when conditions favor buying and sells when conditions require selling.

Whether the market accepts that reframing is another matter entirely is another matter entirely.

The Numbers After the Sale

Strategy’s Bitcoin position after the sale looks like this.

Holdings as of May 31: 843,706 BTC. Total cost basis: approximately $63.87 billion, or $75,699 per coin, including fees. At Monday’s price near $71,400, the entire position carries an implied paper loss of approximately $2.9 billion.

The company also raised $128.3 million last week through its at-the-market common stock program. It has approximately $26.1 billion left under that ATM facility, giving it significant capacity to issue new shares and buy more Bitcoin if conditions change.

The $900 million cash reserve was reduced from a higher level after Strategy used $1.38 billion to retire $1.5 billion in face value of 2029 convertible notes at an 8% discount to par. That’s actually a smart financial move, buying back debt below face value, but it reduced the cash cushion that was supposed to make Bitcoin sales unnecessary.

Saylor provided a specific metric during the Q1 call. He said Bitcoin needs to appreciate at just 2.3% per year for Strategy’s existing holdings to cover STRC dividend obligations in perpetuity without selling common stock. He also said the company would buy 10 to 20 Bitcoin for every one it sells, framing the sales as part of a net-accumulation strategy rather than a liquidation.

At 10-to-1, the 32 BTC sold would require 320 BTC in future purchases to maintain the ratio. At 20-to-1, it’s 640 BTC. Whether those purchases materialize depends on market conditions and capital availability, not just intentions.

The Polymarket Trader Who Called It

While the crypto world debated whether Saylor would ever sell, one anonymous trader decided to bet real money that he would.

On Polymarket, a contract asking whether Strategy would sell any Bitcoin by May 31 was trading at roughly 11% probability when a trader known as “Surprised-Legacy” placed a large bet on “Yes.” Most of the market thought a sale was extremely unlikely. Surprised-Legacy disagreed.

The SEC filing on June 1 resolved the contract in his favor. His estimated payout: $200,000.

The trade was based on observable on-chain evidence. Days before the filing, Arkham Intelligence and community trackers had flagged unusual wallet movements from addresses associated with Strategy. Two batches of approximately 205 BTC each were transferred to Coinbase Prime, Coinbase’s institutional trading arm. Smaller wallet transactions were also active.

Lookonchain tracked a subsequent withdrawal of 411.5 BTC back from Coinbase Prime, which briefly lowered the odds. But the net movement was clear enough for anyone paying attention: Strategy was positioning to sell, even if the final amount was small.

The Polymarket outcome is a neat encapsulation of how prediction markets work at their best. On-chain data provided the signal. The market was mispricing the probability. One trader read the data correctly, took a contrarian position, and earned $200,000 for being right when 89% of the market was wrong.

The December 2022 Parallel

The crypto community immediately reached for the one historical data point it has: Strategy’s previous Bitcoin sale.

In December 2022, Strategy sold 704 BTC at approximately $16,776 each. The sale was a tax-loss harvesting maneuver. Two days later, the company bought back 810 BTC at a lower price, ending the episode with more Bitcoin than it started with. The sale happened within weeks of the absolute bottom of the 2022 bear market.

Bitcoin’s price at the time Strategy sold in December 2022: roughly $16,776. Bitcoin’s price 28 months later: $126,000. Anyone who panicked alongside the filing missed a 650% rally.

Bulls argue that Strategy sells at the bottom. Two data points don’t make a pattern. But the December 2022 sale is the only precedent the market has, and it points to a powerful contrarian signal.

The differences matter, though. In 2022, Strategy sold for tax purposes and immediately repurchased more Bitcoin at a lower price. In 2026, Strategy sold shares to meet dividend obligations, with no announced repurchase plan. The motivation is fundamentally different. Tax-loss harvesting is a financial optimization. Dividend funding is an ongoing operational need. One is a one-time event. The other could become recurring.

If Strategy sells 32 BTC every month to cover dividends, it amounts to roughly 384 BTC per year. Against holdings of 843,706, that’s a 0.045% annual reduction. Mathematically trivial. Psychologically significant. And potentially escalating if Bitcoin’s price declines further and dividend obligations remain constant.

What MSTR’s 6% Drop Tells You About the Market

The stock market’s reaction was more severe than Bitcoin’s, and that gap reveals something important.

MSTR dropped over 6% to $149.75 in premarket trading. Bitcoin dropped roughly 3% to $71,400 on the same news. The stock fell twice as hard as the underlying asset it’s supposed to track.

That disproportionate reaction tells you that MSTR’s premium to its Bitcoin holdings, the extra value investors assigned to the company for its strategy of perpetual accumulation, is evaporating. When the only thing that made MSTR different from a Bitcoin ETF was the “never sell” commitment, removing that commitment removes the premium.

The stock has now fallen over 60% from its highs. At $149.75 with 843,706 BTC on the balance sheet, MSTR is trading at a meaningful discount to the net asset value of its Bitcoin holdings. That discount could attract value investors who see the stock as a cheap way to buy Bitcoin. Or it could widen further if the market expects more sales to come.

For the thousands of retail investors who bought MSTR as a leveraged Bitcoin play, the 60% drawdown has been devastating. Many of them chose MSTR over a simple Bitcoin ETF specifically because of the “never sell” narrative. That narrative drove the stock’s premium, justified its volatility, and created a community of shareholders who viewed their investment as more of a movement than a trade.

Movements don’t survive selling. Trades do.

What Comes Next for Strategy

Saylor’s 10-to-1 promise is now the most important metric to watch. If Strategy buys 320 or more Bitcoin in the coming weeks, it would validate the “net accumulation” framing and suggest the sale was truly just an inoculation. If purchases don’t materialize, the market will treat the 32-coin sale as the start of a trend rather than a one-time event.

The June 30 dividend payment date is the next pressure point. Strategy needs to distribute cash across all five preferred stock series. The $900 million reserve should cover it easily. But if the reserve is drawn down further by debt retirement or other obligations, future dividend payments could require additional Bitcoin sales.

The broader corporate Bitcoin treasury trend is also being tested. If the company that invented the playbook is selling, what does that mean for the dozens of smaller companies that followed it? Trump Media is sitting on over $500 million in unrealized losses. Many smaller Bitcoin treasury companies have even worse cost bases. If the leader sells, the followers often follow.

For Bitcoin itself, the impact of 32 coins hitting the market is zero. The impact of the world learning that Strategy’s stack is no longer untouchable is not zero. It’s a psychological shift that will take weeks or months to fully price in.

The era of “never sell” lasted five years. The era of “sell when necessary” begins now. Whether that evolution makes Bitcoin stronger or weaker as an institutional asset depends on what happens next.

Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Cryptocurrency investments carry significant risk. Always conduct your own research before making any investment decisions.

Salar Salek

Salar Salek Verified AltcoinReporter Author

Salar covers cryptocurrency markets, blockchain technology, DeFi, and emerging digital asset trends for AltcoinReporter. With a background in technology and finance, he has been actively following and investing in the...

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Tags: BitcoinMicroStrategyMSTRSaylorStrategy

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