Strategy’s bitcoin sale marks a shift in its treasury management strategy, with proceeds used to fund preferred stock distributions.
The company’s $2.5 million bitcoin sale is relatively small compared to its $63.87 billion bitcoin position and $26.1 billion remaining ATM capacity.
Strategy’s decision to sell 32 bitcoin may impact its financial obligations, particularly in relation to its $1.62 billion to $17.51 billion remaining ATM capacity across four preferred stock series.
For nearly five years, Strategy’s Bitcoin treasury thesis has been characterized by a single behavioral pattern: continuous accumulation, no realized sales. Through bear markets, bull markets, multiple regulatory inflection points, and the company’s own Q1 2026 disclosure of a $12.54 billion net loss driven by a $14.46 billion unrealized Bitcoin loss, Strategy held its line.
Michael Saylor’s public framing in May 2026 — “Even if we were to sell one bitcoin, we’d be buying 10 to 20 more bitcoin” — articulated a forward operating model in which BTC sales were a tool for funding obligations rather than a strategic shift away from accumulation.
Until now, that framing was theoretical. On June 1, 2026, it became operational.
In an 8-K filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) dated June 1, 2026, Strategy disclosed that between May 26 and May 31, the company sold 32 Bitcoin at an aggregate sale price of $2.5 million, implying an average sale price of $77,135 per coin. The filing, signed by Executive Vice President and General Counsel Thomas C. Chow, is explicit about why: “Proceeds from the bitcoin sales are expected to be used to fund distributions on preferred stock.”
The Math: Why 32 BTC and Why Now
In dollar terms, the sale is a rounding error against Strategy’s $63.87 billion Bitcoin position and its massive $26.1 billion remaining MSTR at-the-market (ATM) stock-sale capacity. However, the structural significance of the disclosure is immense.
Strategy’s preferred-stock complex now spans four distinct U.S.-dollar denominated series plus one euro-denominated series:
STRF (10% Series A Perpetual Strife) — $1.62 billion remaining ATM capacity
STRC (Variable Rate Series A Perpetual Stretch) — $17.51 billion remaining ATM capacity, maintained at 11.50% per annum for June 1, 2026 forward
STRK (8% Series A Perpetual Strike) — $2.10 billion remaining ATM capacity
STRD (10% Series A Perpetual Stride) — $4.01 billion remaining ATM capacity
STRE (10% Series A Perpetual Stream, in euros) — newly disclosed in the dividend declaration
The board declared cash dividends payable on June 30, 2026: $2.50 per share on STRF (quarterly), $0.958333 per share on STRC (monthly, representing the 11.50% annualized rate), €2.50 on STRE (quarterly), $2.00 on STRK (quarterly), and $2.50 on STRD (quarterly).
Strategy’s combined preferred dividend stack represents a substantial recurring monthly cash obligation. STRC alone generates roughly $80–$90 million in monthly dividend obligations. Therefore, the 32 BTC sale is best understood as a deliberate signaling action. It confirms the company is operationally willing to deploy its “sell” mechanism to generate yield, while keeping the scale of the sale well below what would suggest a shift away from accumulation.
The USD Reserve, Now at $900M
A second disclosure in the filing provides further operational context. As of May 31, 2026, Strategy’s USD Reserve, a management-designated portion of liquidity established on December 1, 2025 specifically to support preferred dividend payments and interest on indebtedness, stood at $900 million.
This is a meaningful drawdown from the $2.2 billion cash buffer Strategy maintained earlier in 2026. The shift suggests the company is moving toward a highly capital-efficient operating posture. Instead of sitting on oversized cash positions, Strategy is supplementing its reduced USD reserves with selective BTC sales, ongoing MSTR ATM equity sales (which raised $128.3 million that same week), and preferred-stock issuance.
The Sale Was Profitable
A critical detail in the 8-K is that the 32 BTC sale was executed at a profit relative to Strategy’s blended average cost basis. The average sale price of $77,135 sits roughly 1.9% above Strategy’s average purchase price of $75,699 across its entire 843,706 BTC position.
For a company whose cost basis is the result of years of continuous accumulation through bull and bear cycles, including substantial purchases above $90,000 in late 2024 and early 2025, running the average position above water at current spot prices is the structural condition that makes the sale viable as a funding mechanism without realizing meaningful losses. It also forecloses any narrative that Strategy was forced to sell at distressed levels.
The sale was executed at a moment when Bitcoin was trading in the $76,000–$78,000 range for most of the May 26–31 window, with the Fear & Greed Index sitting firmly in “Fear” territory and the broader market grappling with macro headwinds. Strategy’s average execution at $77,135 falls within that band — implying disciplined execution rather than opportunistic timing.
Operationalizing the Bitcoin Per Share Framework
This disclosure represents the first practical demonstration of Strategy’s core financial metric: Bitcoin Per Share (BPS). As CEO Phong Le recently noted, “Bitcoin per share (BPS) is our True North.”
The mathematical logic is straightforward: each unit of MSTR equity sold dilutes BPS slightly, but each Bitcoin acquired with the resulting proceeds increases the ratio. Selling small amounts of BTC to fund preferred dividends—while continuing to accumulate via MSTR ATM proceeds—keeps the BPS denominator growing while the numerator expands.
Saylor framed it explicitly in Q1: if Bitcoin appreciates more than 2.3% annually, Strategy can fund its preferred-stock dividends “forever” without realized losses. The May 26–31 execution proves this framework is now running in production.
What This Is NOT
Three framings of the 32 BTC sale should be resisted, because they overstate what actually happened.
It is not a strategic reversal: Strategy netted more than 25,000 BTC in the weeks leading up to this 32 BTC sale.
It is not financial distress: A company with $900M in liquid USD and $26.1B in ATM capacity selling 0.0038% of its Bitcoin treasury is not experiencing a liquidity crunch.
It is not an exit signal: If the multi-year thesis was breaking, the board would be liquidating billions, not $2.5 million.
For the broader corporate treasury market, Strategy just provided the ultimate blueprint. The company has proven that a Bitcoin-heavy balance sheet can be operated as a yield-bearing capital base for traditional fixed-income securities. The “sell 1, buy 10” framework has stopped being a slide deck—it is now SEC-filed corporate finance.
What Strategy proved on May 26–31 is small in dollar terms. In structural terms, it is the moment the Bitcoin Per Share framework stopped being a slide deck and started being SEC-filed corporate finance.
Also Read: US Spot Bitcoin ETFs Post Record 2026 Outflow of $2.43 Billion in May
Disclaimer: The information researched and reported by The Crypto Times is for informational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional financial advice. Investing in crypto assets involves significant risk due to market volatility. Always Do Your Own Research (DYOR) and consult with a qualified Financial Advisor before making any investment decisions.








