Strategy, the Bitcoin treasury company led by CEO Phong Le, signaled it may sell a portion of its Bitcoin holdings to fund the dividend on its Series A Perpetual Stretch Preferred Stock (STRC), which carries an 11.5% yield for holders. In an interview, Le outlined a decision framework that prioritizes financial math and shareholder value: the firm would choose to dispose of BTC if the sale is accretive to Bitcoin per share and benefits common shareholders, rather than defaulting to equity sales to cover the dividend. He stressed that any BTC sales would be undertaken only if they improve the fundamental metric for Strategy’s investors.
Le’s stance crystallizes a broader debate within Strategy’s ranks, where co-founder Michael Saylor has floated the possibility of selling BTC periodically to support dividend payments. That prospect has fed concerns among Bitcoin investors about potential selling pressure from one of the market’s largest corporate treasury holders. In a recent earnings discussion, Saylor framed the matter in a way that suggested strategic timing and market signaling could play as much a role as the financial mechanics of the sale. He indicated that Strategy could “inoculate the market” by selling BTC to fund the yield and send a clear message that the company is capable of sustaining its rewards to investors even in adverse conditions. He also said that if Bitcoin appreciates by more than roughly 2.3% per year, Strategy might fund its dividends indefinitely without diluting shareholders by selling Strategy’s stock.
Strategy currently sits atop the Bitcoin treasury sector by size. The company holds 818,334 BTC, a stash valued at more than $66 billion at the time of writing, making it the largest publicly traded BTC treasury according to BitcoinTreasuries data. That scale is precisely what has heightened scrutiny and debate about how such holdings, and the sales tied to them, might influence Bitcoin’s market dynamics in the medium term. The tension is not solely about the amount sold today, but about the signaling effects and the potential for repeated, scheduled, or opportunistic sales to support corporate returns.
In weighing the potential impact of Strategy’s actions, Le argued that Bitcoin’s daily trading volume, estimated around $60 billion, affords substantial liquidity to absorb more than a $1 billion annual commitment in BTC sales tied to STRC dividends. He contends that the market’s depth should prevent a material drag on prices simply from the regular execution of the corporate yield strategy. Still, the possibility of large, episodic sales remains a focal point for investors who worry about price impact during periods of volatility or thinner liquidity windows.
Earlier coverage from Cointelegraph highlighted a conflicting thread within the same narrative: some market observers feared that Strategy’s sales could undermine BTC’s price, even if well-structured and well-timed. In response, supporters argue that the very existence of a durable, revenue-generating instrument like STRC helps attract institutional interest in Bitcoin-backed securities, potentially offering a new path for long-term capital to participate in crypto markets. The topic has also attracted commentary from other industry figures, including those who have defended Strategy’s approach to balancing treasury management with market stability. For additional context, see reporting surrounding Samson Mow’s defense of Strategy’s selling decisions and the broader discourse on corporate BTC reserves.
At the core of Le’s remarks is a practical, numbers-driven criterion: any BTC sale must be accretive to Strategy’s key metric—Bitcoin per share—and must improve outcomes for common shareholders. In other words, the company would prefer to convert a portion of its BTC into cash or equity space if that conversion increases theBTC per share ratio or otherwise strengthens the overall value proposition for investors, rather than disproportionately diluting or depressing equity through other means. Le’s framing is deliberately disciplined, signaling a willingness to use Bitcoin sales as a tool to sustain dividend obligations only when it enhances long-term value, not as a reflexive cash-out to meet near-term financial targets.
What constitutes “accretive” in this setting is a central question for analysts. Strategy has built its corporate narrative around a steady, dividend-backed yield derived from its BTC holdings, rather than relying solely on equity finance or debt instruments. Le’s insistence on accretion implies a trade-off analysis: comparisons between selling BTC to fund the STRC dividend, versus selling Strategy’s stock or using other balance-sheet mechanisms. The decision, he asserts, will be guided by what preserves or improves BTC per share over time, a measure that directly ties BTC holdings to shareholder value and policy credibility.
Michael Saylor’s public commentary adds a complementary, if cautionary, layer to Strategy’s strategic calculus. He has suggested that the company could routinely sell portions of its BTC to support dividend payments, arguing that periodic activity can normalize the process for the market and demonstrate the corporation’s commitment to its yield model. The logic, according to Saylor, is that measured sales can ensure the dividend remains funded even as Bitcoin’s price moves. He framed this as a form of market inoculation—an intentional signaling move rather than an indiscriminate liquidation drive.
In the same breath, Saylor described a potentially capital-efficient path: if Bitcoin can grow in value at or above a certain pace, Strategy might fund dividends without issuing more stock. He has claimed that the company could “stop selling MSTR common stock right now” if BTC-driven proceeds prove sufficient to cover dividends, implying a ceiling on equity dilution should BTC performance be favorable. Whether this is a practical, repeatable reality—given market cycles and macro conditions—remains a core point of debate among investors tracking Strategy’s governance and the long-term implications for BTC’s price formation.
Strategy’s vast Bitcoin reserve has amplified discussions about liquidity, signaling, and price impact. BitcoinTreasuries data positioning Strategy as the largest publicly traded BTC treasury underscores the potential magnitude of any sustained sale. Critics warn that even well-timed, gradual disposals by a single sovereign-entity treasury could introduce selling pressure, particularly if large blocks are unlocked during episodes of heightened volatility or thin liquidity windows. Supporters counter that the market’s daily turnover and deep liquidity should be able to accommodate ongoing BTC-backed dividends without derailing price discovery or creating sustained downward pressure.
From a practical standpoint, the arithmetic of Strategy’s dividend obligation matters. If the STRC instrument carries 11.5% yield, the annual dividend obligation can exceed $1 billion, depending on BTC’s price and the levels of BTC retained within the treasury. Le’s assertion that the market’s liquidity is sufficient to absorb such a flow hinges on continuous, orderly execution and the absence of panic-driven liquidity squeezes. The debate touches on a broader question: how do large corporate BTC reserves influence price formation, and what are the implications for risk management when a crown jewel of the crypto treasury sector contemplates periodic sales?
What Strategy is exploring is more than a one-off liquidity strategy; it represents a test case for how corporate treasuries can evolve in a crypto-native economy. The idea of using BTC sales to fund dividends raises important questions for investors, regulators, and the broader market about governance, transparency, and the durability of revenue streams backed by digital assets. As more institutions weigh BTC reserve strategies, the industry will closely watch how such corporate actions align with risk management practices, tax considerations, and the timing of transactions in relation to Bitcoin’s price cycles.
For readers following the sector, the next chapters will likely center on concrete sale timing, the actual impact on BTC per share, and the resonance of STRC’s yield with other crypto-linked yields. Market participants will also want clarity on whether Strategy’s appetite for BTC sales remains consistent across varying market conditions or becomes more tempered during periods of downside risk or regulatory shifts. The ongoing conversation around Strategy’s approach dovetails with broader coverage of how notable treasury holders manage large Bitcoin positions in relation to dividends, equity strategy, and the quest for stable, long-term value creation in crypto markets.
Looking ahead, investors will want to monitor whether Strategy proceeds with BTC liquidations to fund STRC dividends, how those moves are staggered over time, and what signals emerge about the company’s long-term posture toward its Bitcoin holdings. The evolving dynamic between BTC price action, dividend commitments, and the market’s capacity to absorb new BTC supply will remain a focal point for risk managers and traders tracking the mainstreaming of Bitcoin-backed corporate finance.
Sources and context: Strategy’s statements and the STRC yield framework were discussed in a CNBC interview and related coverage. The company’s BTC holdings and scale are tracked by BitcoinTreasuries, which lists Strategy as holding 818,334 BTC valued at over $66 billion at the time of reporting. For additional perspective on Strategy’s public market stance and commentary from other industry figures, see prior coverage on Strategy’s discussions around selling portions of its BTC treasury.
Readers should stay attentive to official disclosures and earnings calls from Strategy for any updates on potential BTC sales, dividend funding plans, and changes to the STRC program, as these developments will shape Bitcoin market dynamics and investor sentiment in the months ahead.
This article was originally published as Strategy limits BTC sales to defined scenarios, says Phong Le on Crypto Breaking News – your trusted source for crypto news, Bitcoin news, and blockchain updates.


