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Strategy CEO Phong Le Confirms Bitcoin Sales Now On The Table

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Strategy posted a $12.54 billion net loss for Q1 2026, then did something it had sworn it would never do. On the May 5 earnings call, executive chairman Michael Saylor and CEO Phong Le opened the door to selling bitcoin to fund preferred dividends. Days later, on CNBC’s Power Lunch, Le put the math in plain English: when selling coins beats issuing equity, Strategy will sell coins.

That sentence quietly retired a five-year doctrine. It also revealed the actual lever inside the company, a single number called mNAV, currently sitting at about 1.22x. Above it, the old equity-for-bitcoin flywheel still works. Below it, selling bitcoin is the more shareholder-friendly move. Strategy is trading right on top of that line.

The Pivot Phong Le Walked Onto Live Television

Le’s Power Lunch appearance was not a surprise. It was a cleanup operation. Saylor’s earnings-call line, that Strategy would “probably sell some bitcoin to pay a dividend just to inoculate the market,” jolted MSTR shares down more than 4% in after-hours trading and sent bitcoin from $81,500 to below $81,000 inside an hour, according to CNBC’s coverage of the Q1 2026 call.

Le’s job on the segment was to translate the pivot into something a generalist audience could hold. He did. “When it’s better than issuing equity to pay dividends, we’ll do it,” he said, framing the choice as a basic capital-allocation decision rather than a crisis sale. He also reminded viewers that Strategy still holds 818,334 bitcoin, roughly 3.9% of the total supply ever to exist.

The reframe matters because the company’s entire investor base, retail and institutional alike, has been trained on Saylor’s older slogans. “Never sell.” “HODL forever.” “Bitcoin is hope.” Le’s calmer phrasing on CNBC was the first time a Strategy executive publicly described the bitcoin pile as a working-capital asset, not a religious one.

Polymarket traders priced the shift quickly. The platform now puts the probability of any Strategy bitcoin sale during 2026 at roughly 48%, up from a single-digit percentage as recently as April.

The 1.22x Number Almost Nobody Is Explaining

Here is the math wire coverage skipped. Strategy’s CFO laid out a precise threshold on the call: at an mNAV of 1.22x or higher, selling MSTR stock and buying bitcoin grows bitcoin per share. Below 1.22x, selling bitcoin to retire dividend obligations grows bitcoin per share faster than issuing new equity. That is the actual rule.

For years the implicit threshold was 1.0x. Add roughly $9.5 billion in preferred stock and meaningful convertible debt to the capital stack, and the breakeven climbs. The Strategy Q1 2026 earnings call transcript shows management walking analysts through the recalculation in unusual detail.

MSTR closed Tuesday at $186.90, putting the stock’s mNAV around 1.28x. That is above the line by a hair. A 5% drop in MSTR with bitcoin flat would push the company directly into the zone where its own model says coin sales beat share issuance. Investors who think the pivot is theoretical have not done the arithmetic.

Saylor’s framing on the call was blunter. “It’s an important point because I think there is a misconception that the breakeven point is 1.0x,” he said. The misconception lives in nearly every retail trading thread on the stock.

What The Trade Looks Like At Different mNAVs

Strategy’s investor deck modeled the per-share economics across a range. Read these as the company’s own scenario math, not analyst estimates.

  • 1.0x mNAV: Selling $1 billion of MSTR to buy bitcoin produces a negative 48 basis point yield, destroying about $310 million of shareholder value.
  • 1.22x mNAV: Breakeven. The implied BTC yield is 12.2% over three years.
  • 1.5x mNAV: The trade generates a 13.4% BTC yield, mildly accretive.
  • 2.0x mNAV: The same $1 billion swap creates roughly $457 million in shareholder gains and a 14.6% yield.

The mirror trade is the part most observers missed. If MSTR ever gets shorted to, say, 0.5x mNAV, Strategy’s model says the most profitable move on the board is to sell bitcoin and buy back its own stock at a discount. That is the inverse of the playbook the company ran for five years.

The Dividend Bill That Forced The Conversation

Strategy now carries about $1.5 billion in annual dividend and interest obligations. Most of that sits on two preferred stocks. STRK pays an 8% fixed annual dividend. STRC, the variable-rate “Stretch” instrument launched in July 2025, currently pays 11.50% annually and resets monthly to keep its market price near $100 par. STRC alone has scaled to $8.5 billion in market cap, the largest preferred stock by market value in the world, according to figures Le cited on the May 5 call.

The company built a dollar buffer to service those obligations. Strategy’s USD reserve, established in December 2025, now sits at roughly $2.25 billion per the Q1 2026 results release. That is around 18 months of dividend coverage at current rates. Not infinite. Not trivial.

Strategy’s Preferred Stack At A Glance

Ticker Type Annual Dividend Market Size
STRK Fixed perpetual 8.0% ~$1.6 billion
STRF Fixed perpetual 10.0% ~$0.9 billion
STRD Fixed perpetual 10.0% ~$0.6 billion
STRC Variable, par-targeted 11.5% ~$8.5 billion
STRE Fixed perpetual 10.0% Newest issue

Roughly 80% of STRC holders are retail buyers, Le said, the kind of investor who picks a yield product because it sits in a brokerage account and pays cash monthly. That demographic is exactly why the “inoculate the market” sale matters. A single visible dividend funded by bitcoin sales tells those buyers their checks will keep arriving even if MSTR’s stock dips.

Why Saylor Threatened To “Rip The Wings Off” Short Sellers

Short interest in MSTR became loud through April. Reports of forced equity issuance to cover dividends fed a feedback loop where every dip in bitcoin became a story about Strategy’s solvency. Saylor’s response on the call was vintage Saylor.

If you are a short seller and your thesis is the company has to sell equity in order to fund the dividends, I would like nothing better than to rip your wings off.

The line was theatrical. The logic underneath it was not. If Strategy can fund its dividend obligations from bitcoin sales when MSTR trades below 1.22x mNAV, the short thesis collapses. The company is no longer a forced seller of common stock at depressed prices, which removes the dilution risk most shorts were betting on.

Bernstein analysts, who were among the few to model the threshold publicly before the call, argued the pivot strengthens rather than weakens MSTR. Removing the equity-issuance forcing function changes what kind of asset MSTR is. It becomes a managed bitcoin treasury with a flexible capital tap, closer to a closed-end fund than to a permanent dilution machine.

The Numbers Behind The Loss

The $12.54 billion Q1 net loss is almost entirely an accounting artifact. Under the FASB rules adopted in 2025, public companies mark crypto holdings to market each quarter. Strategy reported a $14.46 billion unrealized fair-value loss on its bitcoin position, a paper number, not a cash one.

  • 818,334 BTC held at quarter-end, valued near $66.5 billion at current spot.
  • $75,537 average cost per coin across the entire stack.
  • $5.6 billion in STRC gross proceeds raised year-to-date.
  • $375 million daily trading volume in STRC, with realized volatility down to 3%.
  • 9.4% BTC Yield year-to-date, Strategy’s preferred KPI.

Software revenue, the legacy business almost everyone forgets, came in at $124.3 million, up 11.9% year over year per the company’s Q1 2026 BusinessWire release. It is not the story. But it pays the office bills.

Copycat Treasuries And The Second-Order Risk

Roughly a dozen public companies copied Strategy’s bitcoin treasury template between 2024 and 2026. Most are smaller. Most are less capitalized. Most have less ability to raise dollars in a tight market. If Strategy can publicly justify a sale, the boards of those copycats will face the same conversation in their own committees.

The dynamic resembles what happened in the public equity perpetuals space, where a few flagship issuers normalized a structure others rushed to clone. Our coverage of how equity perpetuals are set to eclipse crypto perps within three years walks through the same copycat dynamic from the derivatives side.

The risk for bitcoin itself is the cascade. If two or three smaller treasury firms hit dividend or debt walls in the same month, coordinated selling could pressure spot. Bitcoin held its ground after the May 5 call, but the structural overhang is real, and traders who model it will price it.

What This Changes For MSTR Holders

The stock is no longer a one-way HODL machine. It is a managed treasury where the buy-or-sell decision is governed by a public formula. That is more transparent than the previous regime. It is also a meaningful re-rating in how the equity should be valued.

For long-term MSTR investors, the pivot trades two risks. It removes forced common-stock dilution at low mNAV. It introduces sell-the-coins risk that was previously assumed away. Whether that is a net win depends on where you think mNAV will spend most of its time over the next two years.

Stablecoin and treasury infrastructure plays sit one degree adjacent to this story. Wells Fargo’s recent thesis on Circle as crypto’s underappreciated winner traces the parallel argument that the cash-flow plumbing of crypto, not the asset itself, is where durable equity value accrues.

Frequently Asked Questions

Will Strategy Actually Sell Bitcoin In 2026?

Probably yes, in small amounts. Saylor said on the May 5 call the company would likely sell some bitcoin to fund a dividend specifically to send a signal. Polymarket prices roughly a 48% probability of any 2026 sale. Watch Strategy’s monthly STRC dividend declarations and its 8-K filings on SEC EDGAR for the actual disclosure trigger when it happens.

What Is The 1.22x mNAV Threshold?

It is the breakeven multiple of net asset value at which selling MSTR stock to buy bitcoin stops growing bitcoin per share. Above 1.22x, equity issuance is accretive. Below 1.22x, selling bitcoin to pay dividends is the more shareholder-friendly move. MSTR currently trades around 1.28x, just above the line. You can track the live multiple on bitcoinquant.co or via Bloomberg’s MSTR data feed.

How Safe Is The STRC Dividend?

Reasonably safe in the near term. Strategy holds about $2.25 billion in dollar reserves, roughly 18 months of dividend coverage across its preferred stack at current rates. Beyond that window, payment depends on capital raises or bitcoin sales. The dividend is not contractually guaranteed. Read STRC’s prospectus on Strategy’s investor relations page before treating the 11.5% yield as fixed income.

Should I Buy MSTR On The Pivot?

That depends on your view of bitcoin and your tolerance for governance risk. The pivot reduces forced-dilution risk, which is good for current holders. It also caps upside at high mNAV, since management has now signaled it will sell bitcoin to retire stock at extreme premiums too. Talk to a licensed financial advisor and read the company’s most recent 10-Q before sizing a position.

Does This Affect Bitcoin’s Price Long Term?

Marginally. Strategy’s 818,334 BTC is roughly 3.9% of total supply, but the company has signaled disciplined sales tied to dividend coverage, not panic dumps. The bigger risk is copycat treasuries with smaller balance sheets following Strategy’s lead in a coordinated way. Watch quarterly filings from public bitcoin treasury firms over the summer. That is where the next signal arrives.

The pivot is neither capitulation nor catastrophe. It is the moment a company that built its identity around a slogan finally admitted the slogan was a marketing layer on top of a balance sheet. The balance sheet has rules. Strategy is now operating by them.

Watch the 1.22x line. That is where the next chapter begins.

Disclaimer: This article reports on corporate actions, analyst commentary, and market events surrounding Strategy Inc. and is for informational purposes only. It does not constitute investment advice. Equity and cryptocurrency investments carry significant risk, including the potential for total loss. Preferred stock dividends are not guaranteed. Readers should consult a licensed financial advisor and review primary filings on SEC EDGAR before making any investment decision. Figures cited are accurate as of publication and may change.

Logan Pierce is a writer and web publisher with over seven years of experience covering consumer technology. He has published work on independent tech blogs and freelance bylines covering Android devices, privacy focused software, and budget gadgets. Logan founded Oton Technology to publish clear, no nonsense tech news and reviews based on real hands on testing. He has personally tested and reviewed dozens of mid range and budget Android phones, written extensively about app privacy, and built and managed multiple WordPress publications over the past decade. Logan holds a bachelor's degree in English and studied digital marketing at a certificate level.

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