Strategy’s May sale of 32 BTC was only the second disclosed bitcoin sale in the company’s history.
The firm’s first sale, in December 2022, was a tax-loss harvesting transaction that critics wrongly viewed as the start of a broader liquidation.
While the 2022 sale proved insignificant, Strategy’s transformation into a complex financing vehicle means investors can’t assume the latest sale will have the same outcome.
Yet the more useful lesson from the 2022 sale may be that investors should be cautious about reading too much into any single disposal.
Late 2022 was one of the most tumultuous periods in cryptocurrency’s history, the culmination of the “crypto winter” that unfolded that year which came to a head with the collapse of exchange FTX in early November.
From a high of around $69,000 a year earlier, bitcoin had fallen over 75% to below $16,000.
“Shares of MicroStrategy just made a new 52-week low, down 90% from the record-high in Feb. 2021,” he wrote in a separate post. “Don’t make the mistake of thinking 90% off is a good buy. This isn’t just a sale, it’s a going-out-of-business sale.”
History unfolded differently. Rather than marking the beginning of a selling cycle, the December 2022 transaction occurred near the bottom of the bear market. Over the following years, bitcoin rebounded to record highs while Strategy dramatically expanded its holdings. The company’s stash has since grown from roughly 132,500 BTC at the end of 2022 to more than 843,000 BTC today.
That experience could tempt investors to dismiss the latest sale as equally irrelevant. But doing so risks overlooking how much the company itself has changed.
The Strategy of 2022 was largely a leveraged bitcoin holder. The Strategy of 2026 is a far more complex financial vehicle built around bitcoin ownership. The company now manages a capital structure that includes convertible debt, common-equity issuance programs and multiple preferred-stock offerings designed to attract different classes of investors.
Against that backdrop, selling 32 BTC, worth roughly $2.5 million and representing less than 0.004% of its holdings, is financially insignificant. But the transaction may reflect a broader reality: bitcoin sales are no longer unthinkable within Strategy’s operating model.
That does not mean the company is abandoning accumulation. Strategy continues to buy bitcoin aggressively and raise capital to fund additional purchases. But unlike in 2022, the question is no longer whether Strategy will ever sell bitcoin.
The more relevant question is whether future sales remain rare exceptions or become another routine tool in the management of an increasingly sophisticated bitcoin treasury empire.
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Michael Saylor says Strategy aims to make STRC the world’s best credit instrument after the company sold bitcoin to help fund preferred stock distributions
What to know:
Strategy sold 32 bitcoin for roughly $2.5 million, with proceeds expected to fund distributions on its STRC preferred stock.
“Our goal is to make STRC the best credit instrument in the world,” Saylor said on X, signaling Strategy’s growing focus on its preferred stock.