Illustration of a corporate executive reviewing Bitcoin sale transaction details on a screen in an office setting.
Illustration of a corporate executive reviewing Bitcoin sale transaction details on a screen in an office setting.
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Strategy sells 32 Bitcoin for first time since 2022

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Strategy sold 32 Bitcoin between May 26 and May 31 to fund preferred stock dividends. The sale, worth about $2.5 million, marks the company's first disposal of the asset since 2022. Bitcoin prices fell following the disclosure on June 1.

The transaction involved an average price of $77,135 per Bitcoin and represented just 0.0038 percent of Strategy's total holdings of 843,706 Bitcoin. The company said the proceeds would cover distributions on preferred stock such as STRC. Bitcoin fell below $70,000 on the news, reaching a six-week low near $69,690 before a partial recovery. Standard Chartered analyst Geoffrey Kendrick said the move could mark the start of Ether outperforming Bitcoin, with the ETH-BTC ratio potentially rising to 0.04 by year-end. Analysts including Tom Lee of Bitmine called the sale typical bottom behavior and economically immaterial. A separate dispute emerged on Polymarket, where traders contested whether the sale qualified under a market deadline because the regulatory filing occurred on June 1.

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Users noted the sale as a minor operational move to fund dividends, with some expressing concern over the broken 'never sell' narrative while others dismissed it as insignificant given the tiny fraction sold and ongoing accumulation. Analysts and observers downplayed bearish signals, highlighting market overreaction to the small 0.004% disposal.

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Illustration of financial market turmoil from Bitcoin sale impacting stock prices
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Strategy sells 32 Bitcoin to fund stock distributions

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Strategy disclosed the sale of 32 Bitcoin in late May, marking its first such transaction to cover preferred stock payments. The move rattled investors and contributed to a sharp drop in the company's shares and Bitcoin prices.

Strategy sold 32 bitcoin between May 26 and May 31 at an average price of $77,135, raising about $2.5 million. The company disclosed the transaction in an 8-K filing on June 1 and said the proceeds will fund distributions on its STRC perpetual preferred stock.

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Strategy acquired 1,550 Bitcoin for approximately $101 million during the week ended June 7. The purchase raised the company's total holdings to 845,256 BTC. It also increased its U.S. dollar reserves by $100 million to reach $1 billion.

Strategy executive chairman Michael Saylor posted a chart on Sunday suggesting another Bitcoin acquisition could follow. The post came as the company faces growing questions over its finances and recent Bitcoin sale.

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Strategy bought back $1.5 billion of its 2029 convertible notes for $1.38 billion in cash. The move reduced the company's total convertible debt to $6.7 billion.

Bitcoin surged above $80,000 for the first time since January during early Asian trading on May 4, 2026, reaching highs around $80,600. The cryptocurrency later pulled back to around $79,000 following reports of an Iranian missile strike on a U.S. warship, which the U.S. denied. Geopolitical risks near the Strait of Hormuz overshadowed strong ETF inflows supporting the rally.

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Michael Saylor, chairman of Strategy, posted on X to indicate that the Bitcoin treasury firm plans to purchase BTC this week. He also called on retail holders to participate in the STRC proxy vote.

 

 

 

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