- Michael Saylor says Strategy can sell small amounts of Bitcoin while still growing reserves
- Strategy now holds more than 818,000 BTC valued at roughly $64 billion
- New preferred stock dividends are reshaping how the company manages its Bitcoin treasury
Michael Saylor stirred up fresh debate in the crypto world after posting six simple words on X: “buy more Bitcoin than you sell.” The message landed only days after Strategy’s latest earnings call, where Saylor openly discussed the possibility of periodically selling portions of the company’s Bitcoin holdings to fund dividend payments tied to its STRC preferred stock product.

For a company that spent years building its reputation around never selling Bitcoin under any circumstance, the shift definitely caught people’s attention. Even hinting at BTC sales feels almost controversial when your entire corporate identity revolves around relentless accumulation.
Strategy’s Bitcoin Stack Keeps Growing Anyway
Despite the concerns, Strategy still controls one of the largest Bitcoin treasuries on Earth. The company currently holds around 818,334 BTC worth approximately $64 billion, accumulated steadily over six years through aggressive equity and debt financing strategies.
Saylor’s argument is that selective Bitcoin sales do not necessarily weaken the company’s long-term position if the overall treasury continues expanding faster than the assets being sold. It’s less about “never selling” now and more about maintaining net growth in Bitcoin holdings over time.
That distinction may sound subtle, but financially, it changes the entire framework behind Strategy’s approach. Instead of treating Bitcoin like untouchable digital gold buried forever underground, the company increasingly views it as productive treasury capital.
The STRC Structure Is Changing The Equation
A huge part of this new strategy revolves around STRC, Strategy’s variable-rate perpetual preferred stock launched in July 2025. The instrument currently carries annualized dividend obligations totaling roughly $1.2 billion per year at rates near 11.5%.
Saylor explained during the earnings call that Bitcoin appreciation itself can effectively support those payments, provided BTC grows faster than roughly 2.3% annually. If Bitcoin outpaces that threshold, the company can theoretically sell small portions of its holdings for dividends while simultaneously acquiring even more BTC through ongoing STRC issuances.
According to Saylor, if Strategy maintains strong issuance growth while Bitcoin appreciates steadily, total reserves could continue climbing indefinitely. In one projection, he suggested the company could potentially add 144,000 Bitcoin within a single year even after funding dividend obligations.
The Market Didn’t Fully Love The Idea
Not everyone seemed convinced by the explanation though. Strategy’s stock dropped roughly 4% during after-hours trading following the earnings release, suggesting some investors felt uncomfortable hearing the possibility of Bitcoin sales mentioned at all.

Bitcoin itself remained relatively stable around the $82,000 level during the reaction. Still, for many long-term supporters, the psychological impact of Strategy potentially selling BTC felt larger than the actual financial implications.
Part of the tension probably comes from how strongly Saylor previously framed Bitcoin as an asset meant to be held permanently. Once that narrative softens even slightly, investors naturally start wondering where the limits actually are.
Massive Paper Losses Added More Pressure
The timing also wasn’t ideal. Strategy reported a net loss of roughly $12.5 billion during Q1 2026, driven primarily by around $14.4 billion in unrealized Bitcoin valuation losses under updated accounting rules.
Those losses aren’t tied to actual cash leaving the company, but they still create ugly headlines, especially when paired with discussions about potentially selling Bitcoin to cover obligations. Bitcoin’s drop toward $62,000 in March before recovering into the low $80,000 range amplified those accounting swings dramatically.
Saylor, though, appears completely focused on the longer-term math rather than short-term optics. His conservative assumptions still model Bitcoin appreciating roughly 10% annually, while his base-case outlook sits closer to 30% yearly growth.
Whether investors fully buy into that vision remains another question entirely. But for now, Strategy seems determined to evolve from simply holding Bitcoin into actively engineering an entire financial structure around it.











