Written by: Javier Bastardo
Compiled by: Plain Blockchain
Strategy's first independent 8-K disclosure of Bitcoin sales has sparked market speculation about "whether Saylor has begun to shift direction," and the BTC price also briefly fell below $72,000. However, the core judgment of this article is: this is not a loss of faith, but a deliberately designed demonstration of capital structure. Selling 32 BTC represents only 0.004% of the total holdings, yet it sends a clear message to rating agencies, credit analysts, and priority shareholders—when necessary, Strategy is willing to utilize its Bitcoin reserves to safeguard the security of priority financing instruments. The primary goal is to pave the way for future financing and continued Bitcoin purchases.
Between May 26th and May 31st, Strategy sold 32 Bitcoins at an average price of $77,135 per coin, cashing out approximately $2.5 million in total. The company disclosed these transactions in an 8-K filing submitted on Monday. This operation was to support the distribution payment for STRC; STRC is its perpetual preferred stock with a floating annual rate of 11.5%.
This is the first time Strategy has disclosed a net decrease in Bitcoin holdings in an independent 8-K filing, and the first time such a transaction has appeared on the company's official website. After the announcement, the market interpreted it as pure negative news, causing BTC to briefly fall below $72,000. But perhaps the situation is not so simple.
An Almost Negligible Sale, But It Sends a Very Clear Signal
According to data from BitcoinTreasuries, as of May 31st, Strategy holds 843,706 Bitcoins with an average cost basis of $75,699 per coin. The sale of 32 coins constitutes only 0.004% of the total holdings. Moreover, the sale price was higher than the company's average cost basis, and the proceeds were used to cover priority obligations rather than distress selling.
Investor and Strategy analyst Mark Moss put it bluntly on X: "MSTR is not Bitcoin itself. It is a publicly traded company that needs to operate within the public stock market. This BTC sale is essentially a move directed at rating agencies and credit analysts, aiming to demonstrate that if needed, the company indeed has the tools and is willing to use them to protect its preferred shares. This is not a change of heart, as can be seen from the scale. The signal being sent is: when the capital structure requires it, the company is willing to monetize a portion of its Bitcoin reserves."
Risks Highlighted Earlier by S&P
This sale did not occur in a vacuum. As early as October 2025, when S&P Global assigned Strategy a B- rating, it specifically pointed out a risk scenario: out of the company's over $8 billion in convertible bonds, $5 billion are currently out-of-the-money and will begin to mature starting from 2028. If Bitcoin prices subsequently face a downturn, these could create a concentrated maturity wall. S&P described this as a risk of "potentially being forced to liquidate assets at low prices."
Thereafter, Strategy has already begun addressing this "debt wall." On May 26th, the company repurchased and retired $1.5 billion worth of near-term convertible bonds maturing in 2029 at an 8% discount, reducing the total convertible bond size from $8.2 billion to $6.7 billion. This Bitcoin sale occurred the week following the completion of this recent transaction.
STRC was launched in July 2025, raising $2.521 billion, making it the largest IPO that year in the US. The monthly debt obligation is approximately $80 to $90 million. Publicly and transparently selling a tiny fraction of Bitcoin to cover these obligations is akin to telling rating agencies: Strategy views the interests of its priority securities holders as a high-priority commitment. Such a credit endorsement makes STRC more attractive to investors; increased demand for STRC allows Strategy to raise more capital; and raising more capital means it can purchase more Bitcoin.
Michael Saylor, Founder and Chairman of Strategy, explained this logic when the question of "whether selling coins might happen" first entered public discussion: "Upgrading, we might sell 1 Bitcoin to eventually buy back 10 to 20 more Bitcoins."
Polymarket's Side Story
This sale also unexpectedly ignited a $2 million controversy on Polymarket: whether the recent transaction should be counted as happening on May 31st, as reported by The Block.
Strategy disclosed on June 1st that the sales occurred between May 26th and May 31st. Those betting "Yes" argue that the 8-K filing itself provides the timing; those betting "No" argue that this information was not publicly known prior to the filing time. The final decision will be made by UMA's subsequent arbitration process.
This is also a fitting subplot. Over the past few months, the market has been betting on whether Saylor would "blink" or soften his stance. Now he has indeed made a move, but entirely on his own terms and in service of his capital structure. The result is not a disruption of Strategy's Bitcoin narrative; rather, it enhances the credit quality of its preferred shares and makes the continued accumulation of Bitcoin more sustainable.







