Strategy (MSTR) sold 3,588 bitcoin for approximately $216 million last week and launched an interactive risk calculator to help investors gauge how long the company can meet its financial obligations under different Bitcoin price scenarios, according to a Monday SEC filing and a company announcement Wednesday.
The sale, executed at an average price of roughly $60,000 per bitcoin, marks a dramatic acceleration from the company's initial sale of 32 bitcoin about one month ago. Strategy said proceeds will be used to fund distributions on its preferred stock and replenish the portion of its $2.55 billion U.S. dollar reserve used for those payments, per the filing.
"The market is finally forcing these companies to choose between holding their digital assets or keeping their investors happy with cash," William Stern, founder and chief executive of financial firm Cardiff, told the New York Post. "They chose cash."
Strategy now holds 843,775 BTC acquired for approximately $63.69 billion, or an average purchase price of $75,476 per bitcoin — roughly 18% above the current market price. The company's preferred stock, STRC, carries a variable dividend rate currently set at 12% annually and has traded as low as $83, well below its $100 par value, triggering a contractual ratchet that adds roughly $53 million in annual obligations each time the rate increases.
The risk calculator, released Wednesday, allows investors to model how long Strategy's $2.55 billion USD reserve and $1.25 billion Bitcoin monetization program — totaling $3.8 billion in liquidity — can cover dividend obligations under various Bitcoin price scenarios. The tool arrives as Strategy's stock has fallen 75% over the past year and the company reported an $8.32 billion loss on digital assets in its most recent quarter.
Bitcoin fell 2% to $61,900 after the announcement, giving up much of its weekend gain from $62,900. The token is now trading roughly 50% below its all-time high of $126,000 reached nine months ago. MSTR shares were also down 2% in pre-market trading.
The sale raises questions about Strategy's capital-allocation playbook. The company, formerly known as MicroStrategy, built its reputation on an aggressive buy-and-hold Bitcoin strategy under co-founder Michael Saylor's "never sell" mantra. The pivot to selling bitcoin for liquidity purposes — combined with the launch of a downside-focused risk calculator — could amplify bearish narratives around Bitcoin price vulnerability, particularly as the broader crypto market faces headwinds from competing capital flows into AI-related IPOs.
June marked the worst month on record for U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs, with about $4.06 billion in net outflows, according to Bitfinex analysts. Strategy's full $1.25 billion capacity under its recently announced BTC Monetization Program remains available, the company said.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.