- Strategy may sell a portion of its 818,334 BTC holdings before the end of 2026.
- CEO Michael Saylor cited focus on BTC per share and STRC stability as reasons.
- The company holds 3.9% of Bitcoin's total supply, valued at over $64 billion.

Strategy Incorporated may sell a portion of its massive Bitcoin holdings before the end of the year, a move signaled by CEO Michael Saylor on May 21 that could test the market's absorption of a multi-billion dollar sale.
The potential sale is intended to bolster the company’s Bitcoin-per-share metric, ensure the stability of its STRC preferred product, and fuel digital credit growth, according to Saylor’s public statements. The announcement introduces uncertainty for Bitcoin's price, which stood at $77,486 as of the report, and Strategy's own stock.
The company is the largest corporate holder of Bitcoin, with 818,334 BTC on its balance sheet, representing about 3.9% of the digital asset's total supply. At early May prices, this stash had an implied value near $64 billion against long-term debt of $8.2 billion. The firm’s average purchase price for its Bitcoin sits near $70,000.
Any sale would be a pivotal moment for Saylor’s high-conviction strategy, forcing the market to digest a large block of coins and potentially shifting the narrative for other corporate treasuries. While executives framed a potential sale as a prudent portfolio management decision, they also acknowledged the risk that investors could misinterpret it as a loss of conviction in Bitcoin.
The consideration of a sale comes after a quarter of significant noncash losses driven by Bitcoin's price volatility. Strategy reported a net loss of $12.8 billion in its first quarter, driven by fair-value adjustments on its digital assets. The company's cash reserves of roughly $2.25 billion now provide about 1.5 years of dividend coverage for its rapidly growing $8.5 billion STRC preferred offering, down from over two years previously.
Management signaled that active management of its cash buffer is required to maintain STRC credit quality, hinting at the trade-offs between continued Bitcoin accumulation and near-term financial stability. The firm has been an aggressive buyer, acquiring 89,599 BTC in Q1 and another 56,235 BTC quarter-to-date, even as prices fluctuated.
Strategy has positioned itself as a leveraged Bitcoin vehicle for investors, using capital markets to amplify BTC exposure per share. The company’s stated goal is to double Bitcoin per share over seven years, which implies a target of around a 10% annualized BTC yield. So far in 2026, the company has raised approximately $11.7 billion in capital to fuel its accumulation strategy.
Executives showcased extreme stress tests showing that Bitcoin’s price could fall 91% to around $7,300 before the value of its BTC reserves would fail to cover its net debt. This was presented as evidence of the strategy's resilience, despite the significant leverage and amplification from its preferred equity.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.