The renowned trader Lightcrypto, who hadn't spoken for a year, dropped a bombshell with his latest message. He claimed that MicroStrategy, the company holding the largest Bitcoin position, has started selling.
According to the address he provided, 491 Bitcoins were sold. At a rough price of around $60,000 per Bitcoin, this amounts to less than $30 million. Within MicroStrategy's holdings of approximately 847,000 BTC, this is barely a drop in the bucket.
Of course, some argue that the behavior of this address doesn't align with the operational logic of MicroStrategy's publicly known addresses, so it's likely not them. However, Lightcrypto is quite famous for finding addresses, and a significant number of people do believe him.
There is a possibility of selling because MicroStrategy just announced their new selling channel. On June 29th, MicroStrategy announced its "Digital Capital Credit Framework," authorizing the board to sell up to $1.25 billion worth of BTC to replenish dollar reserves, pay preferred stock dividends and debt interest, repurchase preferred stock, and buy back MSTR common stock.
What we need to consider is the next step: if the 491 BTC has indeed been sold, what does it mean for the Bitcoin market and MicroStrategy's stock mechanism respectively?
How Significant is 491 BTC Really?
First, let's look at the proportion.

From the spot market perspective, 491 BTC is tiny. It constitutes only about 0.058% of MicroStrategy's total holdings. If you think of MicroStrategy's holdings as a 100-liter water tank, 491 BTC is like scooping out about 58 milliliters.
So, if the market is only concerned about "selling pressure," 491 BTC is not the main point.
The real comparison is with the other two bars. At the end of May, MicroStrategy sold 32 BTC, worth about $2.5 million. That was more like a temporary operation to cover needs related to preferred stock distributions. One month later, the company formalized selling into a framework, authorizing a maximum amount of $1.25 billion, which, at a rough estimate of $60,000 per BTC, could cover around twenty thousand BTC.
In other words, if the 491 BTC sale is confirmed, it's not "MicroStrategy dumping." It's more like the first drops from this new pipeline.
Why Would They Sell?
The answer lies in STRC.
STRC is MicroStrategy's Perpetual Preferred Stock, targeting a face value of $100. Its buyers aren't typical crypto players but yield-focused capital seeking stable cash flow. The original story for this product was smooth: investors buy STRC, MicroStrategy uses the money to buy BTC, BTC backs the company's assets, and STRC continues to trade close to its face value.
The problem is, STRC hasn't stayed close to its face value.
On June 30th, Yahoo Finance showed STRC closing at $84.86. Meanwhile, MicroStrategy raised the annualized dividend rate for STRC to 12% starting in July. This creates an ugly scissors effect. The lower the price, the less the market believes, and the higher the interest the company has to pay.

Here, the 12% isn't just the investor's return; it's also MicroStrategy's cost.
According to MicroStrategy's June 29th announcement, the company's current annualized preferred stock dividend and debt interest expense is approximately $1.76 billion. In simpler terms, they need to have about $4.8 million ready every day just to maintain this capital structure.
This isn't to say MicroStrategy can't afford it. The company disclosed dollar reserves of about $2.55 billion, which alone can cover 17.4 months. But this explains why the selling framework appears. Selling BTC isn't about dumping coins on the market; it's about replenishing cash for the entire structure of stocks and preferred shares.
Is 491 BTC Bullish or Bearish for MSTR?
This should be viewed on two levels.
In the short term, the market might view it as bullish. After the framework was announced on June 29th, MSTR rose nearly 7% in pre-market trading. This reaction isn't contradictory. The market dislikes disorderly selling but appreciates a company clearly outlining its liquidity plans in advance.

This chart explains why MSTR could rise at that time. Relying solely on dollar reserves, MicroStrategy's coverage period is about 17.4 months. Adding the $1.25 billion BTC monetization authorization extends the coverage period to about 25.9 months.
The market isn't buying "selling."
The market is buying "at least disaster isn't tomorrow."
But in the medium term, this represents a downgrade in MSTR's valuation narrative. In the past, MSTR's strongest story was one-way accumulation: raising funds, buying BTC, increasing BTC per share. Now, there's a reverse action: selling BTC, replenishing reserves, paying interest, repurchasing discounted securities.
This isn't necessarily wrong; it might even be what a mature public company should do. But it transforms MicroStrategy from the "perpetual marginal buyer" into "someone who also has to manage liabilities sometimes."
The key to the stock mechanism lies in mNAV, the multiple of MSTR's market cap relative to its net asset value in coins. When mNAV is above 1, MicroStrategy issuing shares to buy BTC is interpreted by the market as increasing BTC per share. But once mNAV falls below 1, further issuance is like selling its own Bitcoin at a discount.
At that point, selling BTC becomes a cleaner way to raise funds.
This isn't immediately bad for common stock. If the company uses proceeds from coin sales to repurchase discounted STRC, it can reduce future dividend pressure, actually benefiting common stock. But the market will also start asking a question: if even the strongest buyer has to sell, what premium should MSTR still enjoy over its BTC holdings?
What Does This Mean for the BTC Market?
491 BTC won't change spot supply and demand.
But it will change the mental charts of traders. In past market downturns, MicroStrategy was often imagined as the buyer of last resort. ETF outflows, miners selling, retail not stepping in? Saylor will.
If the 491 BTC sale is real, a crack appears in this imagination. MicroStrategy may still be a long-term holder and might still buy more. But it's no longer an account with only a "buy" button.
What's more troublesome is that the selling framework is tied to STRC. As long as STRC trades below its face value for an extended period, MicroStrategy will have to choose among several actions: raising the dividend, repurchasing discounted preferred shares, replenishing dollar reserves, or tapping into BTC. None of these choices are a disaster, but each one pulls the "Bitcoin faith" narrative back towards cash flow.
If confirmed, the 491 BTC is just the first receipt.
The real question to watch is whether the market will continue to treat every future receipt as an exception.








