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Strategy Just Confirmed It Could Sell Bitcoin. The Market Did Not Take It Well

Published May 17, 2026
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Summary:
  • Strategy filed plans to buy back $1.5 billion of debt, listing bitcoin sales as a possible funding source.
  • Bitcoin dropped back under $80,000 this week, after sliding from its October 2025 high of $126,000.
  • Strategy stock is now down about 60% from its summer 2025 peak.

Strategy used to be the loudest "never sell" voice in bitcoin. This week, in an SEC filing, the firm said it might.

The market noticed.

What The Filing Said

Michael Saylor's Strategy filed plans to buy back $1.5 billion of its own debt at a discount.

The filing lists three funding sources. Cash on hand. Money raised from stock sales. And money raised from selling bitcoin.

The buy-back is set to settle on or about May 19, 2026.

Until now, the firm's public stance was "hold no matter what." That line is in the rearview.

We translate filings like this every morning in Market Briefs - in five minutes, with a free investing masterclass when you sign up.

The Reaction From Bitcoin

Bitcoin had crawled back above $80,000 in May. That came after sliding from its October 2025 high of $126,000.

The filing pulled bitcoin back under the $80,000 line. Strategy stock is now down about 60% from its summer 2025 peak.

Investors are linking two dots. The firm's newer "Stretch" shares pay a cash dividend of about 11.5% a year, paid out each month.

The asset that funds that promise is bitcoin. So if dividends are due and cash is tight, the math points one way.

The "Stretch" line is fresh on the market. Strategy started selling these shares earlier this year, and a single class of them now carries roughly $1.2 billion in yearly payout duties.

Saylor called the worry "a big nothing burger" in a Coindesk interview. He said that even if the firm paid all of its dividends with bitcoin sales for a year, it would still buy 20 bitcoin for every one it sold.

Why The Market Is Nervous

Strategy is not a normal bitcoin holder. The firm sits on about $63 billion of bitcoin.

That makes it the biggest single corporate holder of the asset. When the largest holder signals it might sell, the size matters as much as the message.

The firm has been buying bitcoin since 2020. It pivoted from a software shop to a bitcoin-buying machine that year, and the strategy made Saylor a household name in crypto.

MEXC Research chief analyst Shawn Young told reporters that a steady Strategy selloff could push bitcoin back toward $40,000.

Crypto newsletter author Lark Davis called the new stance a pivot. He said the firm went from "never sell" to "sell when it helps."

Kraken's Thomas Perfumo also flagged that Strategy already sold some bitcoin in late 2022 to harvest tax losses. So a sale is not new ground.

That shift in tone is what has the market on edge. The size of the holding turns even a small sale into a market event.

What To Watch

The May 19 buy-back will settle either way. The real question is whether bitcoin shows up as a funding source - and how much.

A small sale gets priced in fast. A large one resets the float.

For now, the old line about never selling has been quietly replaced. The new line: sell when it helps the firm.

That is not a crash. It is a posture change.

The next clue comes with the buy-back. Watch the filings. Watch the size.

If you want the read on bitcoin every morning, join 350,000+ investors reading Market Briefs - and a free 45-minute investing course is thrown in when you sign up.

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