Michael Saylor’s Strategy transferred 411.48 Bitcoin worth $30.3 million to Coinbase Prime on May 29, according to on-chain data from Lookonchain and Arkham. The move appears to be the company’s first direct transfer to an exchange in nearly two years.
STRATEGY MOVES 411 BTC TO COINBASE
LookOnChain flagged Strategy depositing 411.48 BTC, worth about $30.3M, into Coinbase Prime.
Polymarket odds that Strategy sells $BTC before Dec. 31, 2026 have now climbed to 84%.
The market is watching every wallet move. pic.twitter.com/hFVrGsVjmO
— Coin Bureau (@coinbureau) May 29, 2026
On-chain data showed two separate transfers of 205.3 BTC and 206.2 BTC, plus a small test transaction of 0.0241 BTC. The transfers were linked to wallets tracked within Strategy’s broader on-chain footprint.
The move does not confirm a sale. Large holders regularly move assets to exchanges for custody, collateral, or settlement purposes. But the timing has drawn attention given recent pressure on both the stock and Bitcoin’s price.
Prediction market Polymarket priced the odds of Strategy selling any Bitcoin before the end of 2026 at around 84%, with roughly $33 million in trading volume tied to the question. That figure reflects trader positioning, not company guidance.
MSTR stock closed at $151.64 on Thursday, down 1.66% on the day. It is down more than 8% over the past week and has fallen nearly 22% since May 11.
Trading volume has also been below the 20-day average of 18 million shares. Insider stock sales by CFO Andrew Kang and Director Jarrod Patten were previously reported as a factor in the decline.
Bitcoin is trading at $73,312, sitting near Strategy’s average acquisition cost of $75,700 per coin. The price has ranged between $72,493 and $73,834 in the past 24 hours. Trading volume dropped 16% over the same period.
Strategy holds 843,738 BTC, making it the largest corporate Bitcoin holder by a wide margin. The company recently used cash reserves to repurchase $1.5 billion of its 0% convertible notes due in 2029.
That buyback reduced total convertible debt from $8.2 billion to $6.7 billion. However, it also left cash reserves at $871 million.
During Q1 earnings, Michael Saylor said the company may sell some Bitcoin to fund dividends. That marked a shift from the previous “never sell” position.
CEO Phong Le confirmed in a Thursday interview the company still intends to grow its Bitcoin per share and continue buying BTC.
Strategy also has preferred stock obligations, including the STRC series, which create ongoing dividend requirements. If Bitcoin prices fall further and capital markets tighten, analysts say that funding pressure could grow.
The next key signal will be Strategy’s official filings. If reported holdings stay at 843,738 BTC, the Coinbase transfer may be routine. If filings show a reduction, it would mark a major shift in the company’s treasury strategy.
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