Saylor says Strategy may sell some Bitcoin to prove it can, not because it needs to
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Michael Saylor introduced a notable shift in Strategy's public Bitcoin stance during the company's first-quarter earnings call on Tuesday, suggesting the firm may sell a small amount of Bitcoin not out of financial necessity but as a deliberate market signal. The rationale Saylor offered was framed as inoculation: by demonstrating that Strategy can sell Bitcoin and the world does not end, the company sends a message to nervous market participants that the firm is stable, its Bitcoin holdings are fine, and the industry is functioning normally. The comment came alongside Strategy's report of a $12.5 billion net loss for the first quarter, driven primarily by unrealized losses on its Bitcoin position as the asset fell 23.8% during the period.
MSTR fell 4.33% in after-hours trading to $178.80 following the earnings release.The framing is strategically significant even if the actual sale would be small. Strategy has built its entire identity around the never-sell Bitcoin thesis, and Saylor himself said in February that he expected the company to buy Bitcoin every quarter forever and that it could withstand a price drop to $8,000 without being forced to sell. A voluntary sale of any size, even a token dividend payment, represents a meaningful evolution in how Strategy is positioning its Bitcoin treasury to external investors. The company's total holdings stand at 818,334 Bitcoin worth approximately $66.7 billion, purchased at an average cost of $75,532 per coin. With Bitcoin up nearly 20% to $81,250 since April 1, Strategy is on track for a materially stronger second quarter, which may be part of why Saylor is comfortable discussing a small sale from a position of confidence rather than pressure.