Analysts divided on message of Strategy’s small bitcoin sale
The move suggests a greater willingness on the part of Michael Saylor and Strategy to use BTC holdings to support the capital structure, said one analyst, while others disagreed.
Analysts divided on message of Strategy’s small bitcoin sale
The move suggests a greater willingness on the part of Michael Saylor and Strategy to use BTC holdings to support the capital structure, said one analyst, while others disagreed.
Strategy’s sale of 32 bitcoin, its first in four years, raised questions about whether the company is shifting its long-standing accumulation strategy.
Two Wall Street analysts said the roughly $2.5 million sale was economically immaterial and viewed it as a tactical move to help fund preferred-stock dividends rather than a meaningful policy change, while another suggested something larger was afoot.
Strategy is lower by 5% on Monday, while bitcoin has fallen back to a near two-month low of $71,000.
Most analysts don’t think so. While the transaction sparked debate among investors, they largely agree that the sale was too small to alter Strategy’s long-term bitcoin accumulation strategy.
The company on Monday said that it sold 32 bitcoin between May 26 and May 31 at an average price of $77,135, generating roughly $2.5 million to help fund dividend payments on STRC, its high-yielding perpetual preferred stock known as Stretch. Strategy still held more than 843,700 BTC at the end of May, meaning the sale represented about 0.004% of its total holdings.
While the announcement initially fueled concerns that Executive Chairman Michael Saylor was backing away from his long-held commitment to accumulating bitcoin, several analysts argued that interpretation misses the bigger picture.
TD Cowen analyst Lance Vitanza said reports suggesting Strategy had become a meaningful seller of bitcoin were overblown.
“Headlines suggesting that Strategy has meaningfully reduced its bitcoin position are, in our view, misleading,” Vitanza wrote in a research note. “The transaction was economically immaterial and does not alter the core accumulation thesis.”
Vitanza noted that management has discussed the possibility of limited bitcoin sales on several recent occasions as part of a broader financing strategy. He added that TD Cowen’s model already anticipated small tactical sales and therefore made no changes to its bitcoin accumulation assumptions or its $400 price target on the stock.
The analyst also pointed to signs that Strategy is rebuilding its cash position. The company also sold 801,944 shares of common stock and used part of the proceeds to replenish cash reserves after repurchasing $1.5 billion of convertible debt at a discount.
Benchmark analyst Mark Palmer reached a similar conclusion about the significance of the sale itself, saying he does not expect bitcoin disposals to become a primary source of funding for dividends.
“We do not expect Strategy to use bitcoin sales as a primary means of funding dividends on STRC and its other perpetual preferred stock issues,” Palmer said. “It is far more likely that the company will continue to replenish its cash reserve through equity issuance and then use reserve funds to pay dividends.”
Palmer, however, argued that the sale could change how investors view Strategy’s bitcoin holdings. “Now, investors should view Strategy’s bitcoin holdings as providing a viable backstop for the funding of preferred dividends,” he said.
Others viewed the transaction as a more meaningful signal.
Risk Dimensions CIO Mark Connors said the move demonstrates that Strategy is willing to prioritize the health of its capital structure over maintaining a strict no-sale stance on bitcoin.
“By selling bitcoin, Saylor has stated two things,” Connors said. “First, we will support our shareholders and creditors in every way… including by selling bitcoin.”
“Second, Saylor and Strategy have prioritized the health and perception of health of the MSTR capital structure over being a diamond-handed OG.”
The differing interpretations highlight the key question now facing investors. Analysts broadly agree that the 32-BTC sale was immaterial. What remains up for debate is whether it was simply a routine treasury decision or an early signal that Strategy’s approach to managing its vast bitcoin reserves is becoming more flexible.
Strategy is lower by 5% on Monday, while bitcoin has fallen back to a near two-month low of $71,000.
The 8-K filing by Strategy Monday disclosed sales for the period May 26 to May 31, but the disclosure was issued on June 1. Polymarket’s May 31 contract is sitting at 81% Yes and in review, while bettors argue over whether the onchain transactions or the filing date controls.
What to know:
A $15 million Polymarket prediction market is in dispute after Strategy’s first disclosed bitcoin sale raised questions about whether trades executed between May 26 and May 31 count toward a May 31 deadline.
‘Yes’ bettors argue that onchain timestamps and Strategy’s 8-K, which reports 32 bitcoin sold between May 26…