Strategy Said It Might Sell Bitcoin. Here Is Why the Community Is Divided on Whether That Is Good or Bad
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Michael Saylor's comment during Strategy's Q1 2026 earnings call that the company would "probably sell some Bitcoin to fund a dividend, just to inoculate the market, just to send the message that we did it" landed as one of the more surprising statements from a company that had built its entire identity around an absolute no-sell commitment to Bitcoin accumulation. The reaction from the Bitcoin and investment community split sharply along lines that reflect genuinely different views about what Strategy's role in the Bitcoin market actually is and should be. On the supportive side, Strategy investor Adam Livingston argued that periodic sales will be accretive for the company's treasury over time, allowing it to finance larger future Bitcoin purchases by generating yield from its existing holdings rather than depending entirely on equity and debt issuance. Bitcoin advocate Samson Mow framed the optionality positively, arguing that a company which might sell, hedge, issue, or buy is harder for short sellers and arbitrageurs to game than one that has publicly committed to only ever doing one thing — unpredictability as a defensive asset in public markets.
On the critical side, some community members argued that introducing any selling mechanism, however limited, creates the foundation for a "doom loop" in which Strategy's credit instruments and Bitcoin sales create reinforcing downward pressure on BTC's spot price during periods of financial stress. That concern is structurally coherent even if the current scale makes it manageable: if Strategy ever faced a situation where declining BTC prices made dividend obligations difficult to meet from appreciation alone, selling Bitcoin into a falling market to fund those dividends could amplify the decline. Strategy CEO Phong Le's response to these concerns was measured and data-driven — the company owns approximately 4% of total Bitcoin supply, its annual dividend obligations of around $1.5 billion represent a small fraction of BTC's $60 billion daily trading volume, and sales will only occur in specific, well-defined circumstances. Whether that reassurance fully addresses the doom loop concern depends on assumptions about tail risk scenarios that hopefully will never materialize, but the debate itself reflects a market that is now taking Strategy's potential selling activity seriously as a price variable in a way it never had to before.
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Strategy Holds 818,334 Bitcoin Worth $61.8 Billion. Here Is What the Numbers Actually Mean
Strategy's Bitcoin treasury has grown from a $250 million initial bet in August 2020 to 818,334 BTC worth approximately $61.8 billion at current prices, making it by a significant margin the largest corporate Bitcoin holder in the world. The company controls roughly 4% of the total Bitcoin supply that will ever exist, a concentration that gives it a unique and somewhat unprecedented position in both the Bitcoin market and in corporate finance more broadly. Its average cost basis across all purchases is approximately $75,537 per coin — meaning at current prices around $82,000, the company is sitting on roughly $5.3 billion in unrealized gains on its total stack. That unrealized profit provides financial cushion, but the Q1 2026 earnings report showed a $1.25 billion net loss for the quarter as Bitcoin prices declined during that period, illustrating how directly and completely the company's financial performance is tethered to Bitcoin's price movements.
The financing structure behind the accumulation is worth understanding because it shapes the risk profile of the entire treasury. Strategy funds Bitcoin purchases through a mixture of equity issuance, convertible debt, and preferred stock instruments — leveraged capital that must be serviced regardless of what Bitcoin's price does. The company's $1.5 billion in annual dividend obligations to preferred shareholders is the most concrete ongoing liability, and it is this obligation that prompted Saylor's earnings call comments about potentially selling Bitcoin to fund payments when necessary. The resumption of buying signaled by Sunday's "Back to Work, BTC" post suggests the company remains financially comfortable enough to continue accumulating rather than shifting into a net-selling posture, but the Q1 results and the earnings call commentary together have introduced a nuance into the Strategy investment thesis that was not previously there: this is no longer purely a one-directional accumulation vehicle, but a company managing a complex capital structure where Bitcoin purchases, potential sales, and dividend obligations all interact in ways that require ongoing monitoring from anyone with meaningful exposure to MSTR stock or the company's credit instruments.