Strategy Affirms Mission to Grow Net Bitcoin as CEO Shuts Down Rumors
Key Takeaways
- Strategy reaffirmed its long-term goal of increasing net bitcoin and bitcoin per share.
- CEO Phong Le rejected speculation that a 32 BTC sale signaled a strategic shift.
- Executive Chairman Michael Saylor’s remarks reinforced expectations for continued bitcoin accumulation.
Strategy’s Bitcoin Sale Sparks Questions About Long-Term BTC Growth
Strategy (Nasdaq: MSTR) faces a key market question after its bitcoin sale: whether the move changed the company’s long-standing BTC accumulation strategy. The issue emerged after Strategy sold 32 BTC for approximately $2.5 million to help fund preferred stock dividends, a transaction that attracted attention despite representing only a tiny fraction of the company’s bitcoin holdings.
On June 7, CEO Phong Le affirmed on X:
“Our corporate strategy is to increase net bitcoin and bitcoin per share over time. Rumors otherwise are just rumors.”
Le’s remarks followed an X post from Executive Chairman Michael Saylor, who shared Strategy’s bitcoin holdings chart and wrote, “A good time to add more dots.” The chart renewed speculation that another BTC purchase could be disclosed on Monday, while Le’s statement provided a more direct response to questions about whether the company’s long-term accumulation strategy had changed.
Despite holding 843,706 BTC, Strategy’s decision to sell a portion of its holdings drew attention because it departed from the company’s recent accumulation pattern. The move also prompted discussion about how its preferred securities could influence future capital allocation decisions.
Dividend Funding Debate Highlights Strategy’s Evolving Capital Structure
The Strategy CEO’s statements arrive as Strategy balances its bitcoin acquisition strategy with a growing portfolio of income-oriented securities. The company disclosed that proceeds from the 32 BTC sale would support dividend obligations tied to preferred shares. Strategy has also reported a $900 million reserve designated for preferred dividends and debt-related payments while maintaining an 11.50% annual dividend rate for STRC.
The sale drew mixed reactions because it marked Strategy’s first BTC sale since 2022. While some questioned whether it signaled a shift in strategy, an analysis shared by Cryptoquant said the transaction was not inherently bearish, citing modest exchange activity and limited distribution pressure.
Meanwhile, Saylor has continued to argue that recent bitcoin weakness reflects capital rotating into artificial intelligence investments rather than a deterioration in BTC’s long-term outlook. Saylor said:
“This is a capital rotation, not a bitcoin impairment. Volatility creates opportunity.”
