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7BitcoinProgressed· since 2026-06-12Jun 14, 2026

Strategy CEO Reveals Conditions for Forced Bitcoin Selling; Saylor Defends BTC Sales as Digital Credit

Strategy's CEO disclosed the specific conditions that would force the company to sell Bitcoin, framing the disclosure as a clarification of the firm's balance sheet durability. Michael Saylor separately defended Strategy's Bitcoin sales as a necessary mechanism within its digital credit business model. Analysis described Strategy's Bitcoin balance sheet as structurally designed to outlast bear market conditions.

Strategy CEO publicly outlined specific conditions under which BTC holdings could be sold; Saylor separately defended prior BTC sales as part of digital credit business mechanics.

Story timeline · 5 days

  1. Jun 16, 20268
    Strategy and Marathon Add $166M in Bitcoin; Strive Raises Capital for BTC Accumulation

    Strategy's $100M purchase confirmed with additional detail on shareholder dilution; Marathon separately added $66M BTC; Strive raised preferred stock capital to buy 111 BTC.

  2. Jun 15, 20268
    Strategy Adds 1,587 BTC for $100M; Total Holdings Reach 846,842 BTC

    Strategy completed a fresh $100M purchase of 1,587 BTC at an average price of $63,024, bringing total holdings to 846,842 BTC.

  3. Jun 14, 20267· this story
    Strategy CEO Reveals Conditions for Forced Bitcoin Selling; Saylor Defends BTC Sales as Digital Credit

    Strategy CEO publicly outlined specific conditions under which BTC holdings could be sold; Saylor separately defended prior BTC sales as part of digital credit business mechanics.

  4. Jun 12, 20266
    MicroStrategy Debt Strategy Under Pressure as Bitcoin Drops; Nakamoto Cuts BTC to Reduce Debt

    MicroStrategy's debt strategy is now reported as under active pressure following Bitcoin's price decline, and Nakamoto separately cut $45M in debt by selling BTC, extending corporate BTC treasury stress signals.

  5. Jun 11, 20266
    Strategy CEO Frames Bitcoin Sale as Market 'Inoculation' Test

Opinion timeline

Takes over time· 2 takes
  1. Mon, Jun 15First Take· 7

    Strategy: funding both sides from the same tap

    Strategy Adds 1,587 BTC for $100M; Total Holdings Reach 846,842 BTC

    Strategy bought another 1,587 BTC last week — but the more revealing detail is how it paid for everything at once. In the same week, it raised $209 million by issuing new shares, used half to buy bitcoin and used the proceeds to also top up a $1.1 billion cash reserve it set aside specifically to service preferred dividends and debt.

    It's a single equity tap funding two obligations simultaneously: accumulate bitcoin, and stay current on the financial engineering that funds the accumulation.

    At 846,842 BTC — roughly 4% of all bitcoin that will ever exist — Strategy isn't a company that holds bitcoin anymore. It's a vehicle whose entire financial structure depends on being able to keep issuing shares at a price that justifies buying more. That works beautifully in a rising market. It's a much more interesting question when it doesn't.

    Full summary & sources →
  2. Tue, Jun 16First Take· 7

    Strategy: the metric that tells on itself

    Strategy and Marathon Add $166M in Bitcoin; Strive Raises Capital for BTC Accumulation

    BTC Yield — Strategy's own measure of how much Bitcoin each share represents — fell three times in a row while the Bitcoin stack grew. That's the tell.

    Saylor's counter is that BTC Yield ignores the $1.1 billion cash reserve sitting behind common equity, and that the full picture is more favourable than the per-share number suggests. That's a legitimate point. But it's also a company asking you to stop using the simple metric and trust a more complex one — right at the moment the simple metric started moving against shareholders.

    At 846,842 BTC, Strategy can probably absorb a shrinking ratio for a while. The question is whether the story works when the number that was supposed to prove it keeps going the wrong way.

    Full summary & sources →

Sources · 4