MicroStrategy peer Strategy has continued its capital reshuffle, selling 3,588 Bitcoin for $216 million to support preferred stock dividend payments and replenish cash reserves, according to a Monday SEC filing. The move reduces the company’s total Bitcoin holdings to 843,775, as Strategy seeks to balance shareholder payouts with ongoing exposure to the asset class.
The transaction also adds a new datapoint to the debate over whether major Bitcoin buyers will eventually be forced to liquidate holdings. Earlier this year, Strategy disclosed its first reported Bitcoin sale since a 2022 tax-loss transaction—raising scrutiny about what, if anything, could trigger further sales.
Key takeaways
- Strategy sold 3,588 BTC for $216 million, cutting its holdings to 843,775, per an 8-K filed with the SEC.
- The sales were executed in two price windows: 1,363 BTC at an average $59,256 and 2,225 BTC at an average $60,773.
- Strategy says the purpose was to fund preferred stock dividends and restore cash reserves, keeping payout obligations covered.
- Analyst coverage from Bernstein previously argued the company was unlikely to be compelled to sell due to its liquidity position.
Strategy’s latest Bitcoin liquidation and what it funds
In its 8-K, Strategy states that it sold 3,588 Bitcoin for proceeds totaling $216 million. After the sale, the company reported remaining holdings of 843,775 BTC. The filing frames the sell-down as part of a broader effort to manage near-term corporate obligations while maintaining a large Bitcoin position.
Strategy also broke out portions of the sales by timing and average execution price. It sold 1,363 BTC at an average price of $59,256 between last Monday and Tuesday, then sold 2,225 BTC at an average price of $60,773 between Wednesday and Sunday. Those details matter for investors assessing whether the company is selling opportunistically across specific windows or responding to cash needs that require market timing.
Why the sale matters for investors watching “forced selling” risk
Bitcoin sales by large holders can move sentiment—even when they are not tied to distress. The key question for the market has been whether Strategy’s capital plan could eventually lead to compelled liquidation, or whether the company has enough liquidity to prevent that outcome.
That question has been addressed in prior research cited by the article, including a report from Bernstein. Bernstein argued that Strategy was unlikely to be forced to sell its holdings, pointing to the company’s liquidity position and cash reserves. The report also estimated that Strategy had 17 months of cash coverage for dividend obligations and interest payments and described Strategy as a “balancing force” in a market where other major Bitcoin-related players have been net sellers.
From an investor’s perspective, this framing reduces the immediacy of “death spiral” style fears—though the latest sale shows Strategy is willing to convert some Bitcoin exposure into cash when the corporate calendar requires it. What remains uncertain is whether future dividend cycles or funding needs would lead to additional sell-offs, or whether this was a contained adjustment.
From Strategy’s first sale to a broader read-through
Earlier coverage noted that Strategy disclosed the sale of 32 Bitcoin in early June, described as its first reported Bitcoin sale since a 2022 tax-loss transaction. The updated 8-K expands the story from a small exception into a far larger cash-generating action.
The market implication is not automatically bearish. Large holders can sell for operational reasons without changing their long-term thesis, especially when they hold substantial Bitcoin inventories and manage liquidity through a mix of cash and structured funding. Still, the direction and size of future transactions will likely influence how traders interpret Strategy’s role in the broader Bitcoin flow picture.
What to watch next
Going forward, investors should track whether Strategy repeats similar sell-downs in subsequent dividend periods and whether additional SEC disclosures clarify the cadence of its cash-management plan. The most important signal will be how Strategy’s reported liquidity coverage and dividend funding needs evolve relative to the timing and scale of future Bitcoin sales.





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