MicroStrategy Sells 32 BTC, Shares Drop to Four-Month Low as STRC Slips

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MicroStrategy sold 32 BTC for $2.5 million as Bitcoin prices dipped, pushing shares to a four-month low on June 6, 2026. STRC fell below $100, testing key support and resistance levels. The firm holds $50.4 billion in Bitcoin, with $13.7 billion in unrealized losses. The move raises questions about its risk-to-reward ratio amid CEO Michael Saylor’s long-term buy-and-hold stance.

Strategy Shares tumbled to a four-month low Friday as a slide in Bitcoin and recent company moves rattled investors — and the preferred stock product known as Stretch (STRC) wavered alongside them. What happened - Strategy (the Tysons Corner, Virginia firm led by co-founder and Executive Chairman Michael Saylor) saw its common shares fall as low as $114 on Friday — their weakest level since early February — before recovering to close around $120, roughly a 7% drop on the day, per Yahoo Finance. - Bitcoin also slumped, hitting as low as $59,227 (CoinGecko) — the lowest price seen since 2024 — before recovering to about $60,311, down roughly 5% over 24 hours. Why traders reacted - The company surprised some in the crypto community this week by selling Bitcoin for the first time since 2022 — a small liquidation of 32 BTC for about $2.5 million. Strategy framed the move as an effort to “inoculate” the market against surprise sales so it can use proceeds to support dividends on its preferred product, Stretch (STRC). - STRC, which currently pays an 11.5% annual dividend disbursed monthly, softened on Friday. The preferred shares fell about 3.6% to $93, moving further below the $100 par value they are designed to trade near; STRC has hit lows of $90.38 since its launch last July. Product mechanics and market impact - STRC debuted as a $2.5 billion IPO and — amid trading and investor demand — now implies an approximate market capitalization of $9.55 billion, bringing with it recurring cash obligations tied to the dividend. - Strategy has stated it will issue more STRC when the price rises above $100 (using proceeds to buy more Bitcoin) and can raise STRC’s dividend if the price sits below par to drive demand. Benchmark-StoneX analyst Mark Palmer told Decrypt that the recent pullback “isn’t a real concern for Strategy,” calling the dip “well within the range we’d expect,” and noting a similar retreat and rebound last month. - Palmer also highlighted the product’s monthly rate-reset mechanism, designed to push the preferred’s price back toward par; STRC’s dividend has been unchanged for the past four months. Bigger balance-sheet context - Strategy disclosed it has spent $63.9 billion acquiring Bitcoin since its corporate pivot and currently holds a stash valued at roughly $50.4 billion — which was about $13.7 billion underwater on Friday, reflecting unrealized losses. - The company had set aside $2.25 billion to ensure it could continue STRC distributions, but last month it used about 61% of that reserve to repurchase debt. Analysts who reviewed the 32-BTC sale described it as negligible relative to the company’s overall holdings, but the move still contrasts with Saylor’s long-standing “buy-and-never-sell” stance. Why it matters - The episode highlights the tension between managing investor expectations for steady STRC payouts and maintaining a large Bitcoin position through volatile markets. Small tactical sales and the preferred-share mechanics give Strategy levers to manage dividends and market reactions — but they also expose the firm to scrutiny whenever BTC retreats and preferred shares trade away from par.

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