Key Takeaways
- Saylor’s post redirected attention toward Strategy’s bitcoin accumulation approach after a rare sale.
- Strategy still holds 843,706 BTC, keeping MSTR closely linked to bitcoin price swings.
- Investors are watching whether future purchases, financing needs, or dividends reshape the narrative.
Saylor’s Post Refocuses Traders After Strategy’s Rare Bitcoin Sale
Michael Saylor, executive chairman of Strategy (Nasdaq: MSTR), has renewed speculation about the company’s next bitcoin move after a rare BTC sale rattled traders last week.
His latest X post, “A good time to add more dots,” pushed attention back toward Strategy’s accumulation strategy and whether another purchase disclosure could follow. The post fueled speculation that Strategy could resume bitcoin purchases during the recent market pullback.

The message arrived with Strategy still holding 843,706 BTC, valued near $52.2 billion. The company’s average purchase price stood near $75,701 per coin, while BTC traded around $62,000 on the company dashboard. Investors are now focused on the size of Strategy’s reserve and the financing model supporting it. Bitcoin per share stood at 220,429 sats, keeping MSTR closely tied to bitcoin’s next major move.
Strategy sold 32 BTC for $2.5 million between May 26 and May 31, with proceeds expected to fund preferred stock distributions. The sale drew attention because it marked the company’s first disclosed BTC disposal since 2022. Saylor later broke his silence by promoting STRC, Strategy’s perpetual preferred stock, rather than directly addressing the sale. An analysis shared by Cryptoquant showed limited exchange inflows and muted distribution pressure.
Strategy’s Market Metrics Show Why Investors Are Watching the Next Move
The company’s bitcoin position remains central to how investors value the company. MSTR traded near $120.44, with market capitalization around $42.5 billion and enterprise value near $63.8 billion. The company reported roughly $900 million in cash reserves, debt near $6.75 billion, and preferred securities valued around $15.5 billion.
Those figures show why Saylor’s posts can redirect market attention quickly. Open interest stood above $35 billion, and implied volatility reached 79%, reflecting heavy speculation around MSTR’s bitcoin-linked equity profile. Investors are weighing whether Strategy can preserve its accumulation narrative while managing dividends, leverage, and future capital needs.
Bitcoin’s short-term price action has sharpened the debate. BTC held above a $59,100 low while trading near $62,000, with short-term charts showing oversold conditions and early bounce signals. Moving averages still leaned bearish, and the $63,000 to $64,000 area remained the key recovery zone. A stronger rebound could ease pressure on Strategy’s reserve value.
Saylor’s broader Bitcoin framework gives long-term investors another lens for the company’s strategy. He described four ideologies testing BTC’s future: adoption, capital markets, technical change, and monetary principles. That framing keeps Strategy’s position tied to more than price action. It presents the company as a bet on bitcoin’s role in finance, corporate treasury management, and digital capital markets.





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