Strategy’s Michael Saylor hints at selling 0.2% of Bitcoin while planning to buy 5-10x more

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Michael Saylor, the executive chairman who turned a mid-tier software company into the world’s most aggressive corporate Bitcoin accumulator, is now talking about selling some of it. Not a lot. About 0.2% per month. But for a guy who built his entire brand on diamond-handing Bitcoin into eternity, even a fraction of a percent feels like news.

Here’s the thing. Saylor isn’t exactly going soft. During Strategy’s Q1 2026 earnings call, he laid out a plan to sell small slivers of the company’s massive Bitcoin stash while simultaneously buying back 5 to 10 times more in the same period. The net effect, he argues, is that Strategy remains a relentless Bitcoin accumulator. The selling is just a funding mechanism, not a philosophical retreat.

The math behind the move

Strategy holds over 818,000 Bitcoin, making it the third-largest known holder on the planet. At current prices, that’s a position worth well north of $80B. Selling 0.2% of that monthly is not exactly a fire sale.

The reason for the sales comes down to a fairly pedestrian corporate obligation: dividends. Strategy needs to fund payouts on its STRC preferred stock, and rather than selling shares of MSTR on the open market or taking on additional debt, the company is considering using a thin slice of its Bitcoin holdings to cover those costs.

Saylor framed the approach as a way to capture tax credits and avoid diluting MSTR shareholders. In English: instead of printing new shares (which waters down everyone’s ownership) or borrowing money (which adds risk), they’d tap into the asset that’s appreciated the most on their balance sheet.

“Even if we were to sell one Bitcoin, we’d be buying 10 to 20 more Bitcoin.”

That was Saylor’s message to anyone worried that the company’s core thesis had shifted. For every Bitcoin that leaves Strategy’s treasury to cover STRC dividends, the company plans to acquire a dramatically larger amount through its various capital-raising programs.

Saylor went further, affirming that Strategy expects to be a “net buyer of Bitcoin in every month and every quarter going on forever.”

What this means for investors

For MSTR shareholders, the key metric to watch is Bitcoin per share. If the company sells 0.2% of its Bitcoin monthly but acquires 1-2% in the same period, the math works. Bitcoin per share goes up, and shareholders benefit from the compounding effect of a growing BTC position relative to the share count.

The risk is execution. Strategy’s ability to buy 5-10x more Bitcoin than it sells depends entirely on its capital-raising machinery continuing to function. That means favorable equity markets, willing bond buyers, and a Bitcoin price that makes new purchases accretive rather than dilutive.

For the broader Bitcoin market, Strategy’s 818,000 BTC position represents a concentration risk that cuts both ways. When they’re buying, it provides consistent demand. The 0.2% monthly sales are small enough to be absorbed without a ripple, but they do establish that Strategy’s Bitcoin is no longer entirely off the market.

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