Strategy Moves 411 BTC to Coinbase Prime, Fuels Sale Speculation

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Strategy moved 411 BTC to Coinbase Prime, sparking trading strategy discussions. The Bitcoin returned to custody wallets within three hours, indicating routine activity. During Q1 earnings, Michael Saylor mentioned selling Bitcoin to meet preferred stock dividend obligations, shifting from past statements. The move raises questions about risk-to-reward ratio for long-term holders.
  • Strategy moved 411 BTC to Coinbase Prime for the first time in two years.
  • The Bitcoin returned in three hours, suggesting routine custody activity.
  • Saylor hinted at selling Bitcoin to cover preferred stock dividend obligations.

Michael Saylor built Strategy’s entire identity around one promise: never sell Bitcoin. This week, that promise developed its first visible crack.

On Friday, Strategy moved 411 Bitcoin worth $30.3 million to Coinbase Prime. This was the company’s first major exchange transfer in nearly two years, and in crypto, when the world’s largest corporate Bitcoin holder suddenly moves coins to an exchange, people notice.

Prediction market Polymarket certainly did. Within hours, the odds of Strategy selling Bitcoin before the end of 2026 shot up to 91%. Panic spread quickly across social media. The narrative wrote itself: Saylor is finally selling.

However, a user noted three hours after the transfer, on-chain data on Arkham’s dashboard showed the same coins returning to Strategy’s custody wallets.

Saylor Said the Quiet Part Out Loud

The transfer itself may have been routine, but what Saylor said on Strategy’s first quarter earnings call was anything but.

The company posted a $12.54 billion loss for the quarter. It’s 818,334 Bitcoin sit at an average cost of $75,537 per coin, meaning the entire stack is currently underwater. And on that call, Saylor floated something that would have been unthinkable a year ago: selling some Bitcoin to pay dividends.

He said, “We will probably sell some Bitcoin to pay a dividend just to inoculate the market and send the message that we did it.”

He framed it carefully. A deliberate signal of financial strength. He even suggested the proceeds could enable net Bitcoin buying overall. But strip away the framing, and the statement is straightforward: the man who never sells is now publicly discussing selling.

What Actually Matters Here

Bitcoin is holding near $73,000, and the 411 BTC that briefly visited Coinbase Prime came home safely. But Saylor’s earnings call comments changed something. For years, institutional investors took comfort in the certainty of his position.

The possibility of a sale, however small and however strategically framed, introduces a variable that was not there before. Markets do not like new variables.

Whether the transfer was genuinely routine or a quiet rehearsal for something larger, Strategy has not said.

Related:Bitcoin Price Prediction: BTC Risks Deeper Pullback Below $72K

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