Strategy May Sell Bitcoin to Fund Dividends, Saylor Breaks From ‘Never Sell’ Stance

Key Takeaways:

  • Saylor said Strategy may sell BTC to pay dividends in May 2026, reversing its ‘never sell’ stance.
  • Strategy holds 818,334 BTC at a $75,537 average cost amid $1.5B in annual dividend obligations.
  • MSTR fell over 4% after hours and bitcoin dipped below $81,000 following the Q1 earnings call.

What Saylor Said

The disclosure came during Strategy’s Q1 2026 earnings call on Monday, where Saylor noted: “We will probably sell some bitcoin to pay a dividend just to inoculate the market and send the message that we did it.”

The choice of the word “inoculate” was deliberate, with Saylor framing the potential sale as a signaling exercise rather than a purely financial necessity, a move designed to demonstrate to markets and preferred shareholders that Strategy can meet its obligations without stress, removing uncertainty before it becomes a liability.

“You buy bitcoin with credit, you let it appreciate, and then you sell bitcoin to pay the dividend,” he added, describing the mechanism as consistent with the firm’s core model rather than a contradiction of it.

CEO Phong Le added that the company would consider selling bitcoin only if doing so was accretive to bitcoin per share, meaning any sale would need to increase the per-share bitcoin exposure for common equity holders, preserving the integrity of the core investment thesis. “Our ability to sell bitcoin either to buy U.S. dollars or sell bitcoin to buy debt if it’s accretive to bitcoin per share is something that we would consider doing going forward,” Le said.

Strategy currently holds 818,334 BTC at an average acquisition cost of $75,537 per coin, with the firm’s digital assets carrying a combined market value of $64.14 billion;

The Numbers Behind The Pivot

The context behind the shift is a tough first quarter as Strategy reported a $12.54 billion Q1 net loss driven by a $14.46 billion unrealized decline on its bitcoin holdings (as BTC slid toward $62,000 during February’s market pullback).

The company faces roughly $1.5 billion in annual obligations across its two preferred stock instruments: STRK, which pays 8% dividends, and STRC, which pays approximately 10–11.5% annually. Strategy has about 18 months of dividend coverage remaining.

With bitcoin’s recent price volatility limiting the firm’s ability to raise fresh capital on favorable terms, a selective bitcoin sale, structured as accretive to BTC per share, gives the company a liquidity backstop that does not require issuing new equity at a discount.

Following the call, Strategy’s stock fell more than 4% in after-hours trading. Bitcoin itself briefly slipped below $81,000.

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