On Sunday, June 29, Michael Saylor posted Strategy’s Bitcoin acquisition tracker to X with the caption “We’re gonna need more charts,” his by-now-famous tell that a Monday 8-K and another purchase are coming. It arrived with Strategy roughly $13 billion underwater and Bitcoin trading below $60,000, its weakest level since October 2024.
Here’s the catch the bullposting glosses over. In a June 29 filing, Strategy said it may sell up to $1.25 billion of Bitcoin through a new monetization program to bolster its cash reserve and fund preferred dividends and interest.
The man who built a brand on never selling is now signaling a buy and filing for a sale in the same breath.
The Numbers Behind the Defiance
The position is brutal on paper. Strategy holds 847,363 BTC at an average cost near $75,646, a cost basis of roughly $64.1 billion against a market value around $50.8 billion. The most recent confirmed buy was a 520 BTC tranche on June 22 for about $35 million, its smallest in recent memory, alongside a $300 million top-up to the dollar reserve.
Saylor has framed the math as asymmetric, telling interviewers in early May that Strategy would buy 10 to 20 bitcoin for every coin it sells. That posture reads as conviction or denial depending on which side of the trade you’re on.
The Capital Stack Is Cracking
The real stress isn’t the coins, it’s the machine funding them. MSTR closed near $82 on Friday, its lowest since February 2024, while STRC, the variable-rate preferred designed to sit near its $100 par, hit a record low around $71 against an 11.5% dividend.
The decisive number is mNAV. On June 27, Strategy’s enterprise value fell below the value of its Bitcoin for the first time, dropping mNAV under 1. Once the market values the company at less than its own coins, issuing new stock to buy more Bitcoin becomes dilutive, which chokes the perpetual-motion engine that built the whole thing. A Block Research analysis put MSTR common stock behind roughly $6.7 billion of convertible debt and about $15.5 billion of perpetual preferred, leaving ordinary shareholders dead last in line.
Bitcoin Critics Smell Blood
The weakness pulled prominent names out of the woodwork:
Saylor’s team “wasn’t focused on the right stuff,” and long-term value needs utility, not leverage. — Brad Garlinghouse, CEO, Ripple
Garlinghouse, speaking to CNBC, said he stays bullish on Bitcoin but pointed to STRC’s discount as proof of a flawed model. Schiff seized on the monetization filing to argue the accumulation that helped pump Bitcoin is now reversing. Even CryptoQuant’s Julio Moreno urged Strategy to pause buying and rebuild cash.
Doubling Down or Managing the Damage?
This is where the chart-posting meets reality. The orange-dots graphic still moves traders, who front-run the Monday 8-K every week. But the signal now competes with a filing that says the company might sell more Bitcoin than it has bought in any recent month.
Strategy did record its first sale since 2022 on June 1, offloading 32 BTC to cover a dividend, then resumed buying, so the playbook of small tactical sells is established. The $1.25 billion figure is a different order of magnitude.
Strategy is “now a Bitcoin seller.” — Peter Schiff, economist and longtime Bitcoin critic
The 8-K is the only thing that settles it. Size, funding source, and average price will reveal whether Saylor is quietly managing a balance sheet under pressure or genuinely doubling down at the worst entry point in his company’s history.
So which is it: the most disciplined conviction trade in crypto, or a funding model finally buckling in public?
