Key Takeaways
Strategy sold 32 Bitcoin between May 26th and May 31st at an average price of $77,135, generating $2.5 million. The SEC filing states the reason in one sentence: the proceeds were used to fund distributions on preferred stock. In other words, Strategy needed cash to pay its preferred shareholders their dividends, and selling a small amount of Bitcoin was one way to raise it.
That is the entire explanation. No change in strategy, no market timing, no financial distress. Preferred stock dividends are fixed obligations that must be paid in dollars on a set schedule. Bitcoin cannot be handed to shareholders as a dividend payment. Cash can. The 32 BTC sale converted a fraction of the holdings into the dollars needed to meet that obligation.
Strategy runs several series of preferred stock, each carrying its own fixed dividend rate. The board declared the following payments due on June 30th to shareholders of record as of June 15th: STRF pays $2.50 per share for the quarter at a 10% annual rate, STRK pays $2.00 per share at 8% annually, STRD pays $2.50 per share at 10% annually, and STRC, the variable rate series, is set at 11.50% annually paying approximately $0.958 per share for June.
These are not optional. Preferred dividends sit above common shareholders in the capital structure and must be paid regardless of what Bitcoin does in any given week.
The Bitcoin sale was actually the smallest capital markets move Strategy made that week. During the same period, the company sold 801,994 shares of MSTR common stock through its at-the-market offering program, raising $128.3 million in net proceeds. That figure dwarfs the $2.5 million from the Bitcoin sale and was the more significant liquidity event of the period.
Strategy also maintains a USD Reserve established in December 2025, specifically designated to cover preferred stock dividends and debt interest without needing to touch Bitcoin. As of May 31st that reserve stands at $900 million, a substantial buffer that makes the 32 BTC sale look even more routine.
At 32 coins against a total holding of 843,706 BTC, the disposal represents less than 0.004% of Strategy’s entire Bitcoin stack. The average purchase price across all holdings sits at $75,699 per coin, meaning the 32 sold at $77,135 were disposed of at a small premium to the portfolio average. The filing contains no new Bitcoin purchases during the period. Based on this document alone, the sale was a dividend payment mechanism and nothing more.
The information provided in this article is for educational purposes only and does not constitute financial, investment, or trading advice. Coindoo.com does not endorse or recommend any specific investment strategy or cryptocurrency. Always conduct your own research and consult with a licensed financial advisor before making any investment decisions.
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