A Look Inside Saylor’s Bitcoin Monetization Program: Strategy Files to Sell $1.25B in BTC

Bitcoin News: Michael Saylor’s Strategy (Nasdaq: MSTR) filed on June 29 to sell up to $1.25 billion worth of Bitcoin, framing the potential liquidation as a “Bitcoin Monetization Program” designed to bolster its cash reserve, cover preferred stock dividends, and service interest obligations.

The filing marks the most explicit structural retreat yet from the accumulate-at-all-costs playbook Saylor spent years selling to institutional and retail investors alike.

The proximate trigger was June 27, when Strategy’s mNAV, the ratio of its enterprise value to its Bitcoin holdings, fell below 1 for the first time.

That number is not just an optics problem. The entire capital model depended on trading at a premium to net Bitcoin value, which let the company issue equity and preferred stock to buy more BTC at accretive prices. With mNAV at 0.99, that flywheel has stalled.

Strategy’s cash reserve currently stands at approximately $2.55 billion. The company said any Bitcoin sales would be executed “from time to time” depending on market conditions and capital needs, language that keeps the door open without committing to a specific timeline or tranche size.

It also authorized two separate share repurchase programs of up to $1 billion each: one for its Class A common stock and one for its Digital Credit Securities, which cover the preferred stock series including STRK, STRF, and STRD.

The preferred stack is where the pressure concentrates. STRK carries an 8% annual dividend on roughly $584 million raised. STRF pays 10%, compounding to 18% if payments are missed, on $711 million raised. STRD, the most recent series, generated approximately $979.7 million in net proceeds at a 10% non-cumulative rate.

Combined, the annual preferred dividend burden exceeds $700 million. When Bitcoin was trading near its late-2025 highs around $125,000 and mNAV was firmly above 1, issuing new equity to cover those costs was trivially easy. At $60,000 Bitcoin with a sub-1 mNAV, it is not.

This is also not the first time Strategy has touched its Bitcoin treasury. On June 1 the company sold 32 BTC for approximately $2.5 million, a small transaction explicitly tied to funding preferred stock distributions. The June 29 filing raises the potential scale by several orders of magnitude.

Bitcoin (BTC)
24h7d30d1yAll time

Bitcoin price action heading into the filing had already done significant damage. BTC retested $58,000 last week alongside a $3 billion market outflow and a concurrent crash in MSTR shares, compressing Strategy’s NAV coverage at exactly the moment it needed room.

Bitcoin has since recovered modestly to approximately $60,175, but remains well off levels where Strategy’s model operated without friction. Options market structure around the $60,000 range has kept price action choppy, with no clean technical resolution yet.

Peter Schiff, gold advocate and longtime Bitcoin critic, did not miss the moment. In a June 29 post, Schiff said Strategy was “now a Bitcoin seller”, a pointed description given Saylor’s years of public messaging that Bitcoin should never be sold. Following the June 1 transaction, Schiff had written, “What Saylor giveth, Saylor taketh away,” arguing that the company’s aggressive accumulation had helped push Bitcoin price higher before this year’s reversal. His framing is polemical, but the underlying structural point, that Strategy’s buying was itself a price support mechanism that runs in reverse when the model flips, is not wrong.

Strategy has pushed back on the capitulation narrative, maintaining publicly that Bitcoin remains its “primary treasury reserve asset” and that liquidity management does not represent a change in long-term conviction.

The board also adopted a policy requiring at least 12 months of reserve coverage for preferred dividends and interest obligations. That is a meaningful governance shift toward balance-sheet discipline, and an implicit acknowledgment that market access can no longer be assumed.

MSTR shares traded at $82.31 at time of writing, down 3.5% on the day, continuing a sharp decline from the stock’s highs when Bitcoin was approaching $125,000. The contrast between those two data points tells the whole story: MSTR was not just a Bitcoin proxy, it was a leveraged bet on mNAV staying above 1. That condition no longer holds.

Discover: The Best Token Presales

Bitcoin News: MSTR, Does the $90 Level Hold, or Is the Model Still Repricing?

At $92, MSTR is holding just above what has emerged as near-term psychological support around $90. A breach of that level on volume would likely accelerate selling from holders who bought into the company as a premium Bitcoin vehicle, because the premium is now gone, and the equity offers neither the purity of direct BTC exposure nor the safety of a company generating operating cash flow to backstop the position.

The two $1 billion repurchase programs give management a tool to defend both the common stock and the preferred series, which is not nothing. Buybacks at these levels could provide a technical floor if deployed aggressively.

But repurchase authorization and actual deployment are different things, and the company’s first obligation is covering those preferred dividend payments before it can return capital to common holders.

Source: Tradingview

The most likely near-term outcome is continued range-bound choppiness in MSTR between $80 and $89, with direction determined almost entirely by whether Bitcoin can reclaim $63,000 and hold it.

A recovery through that level would push mNAV back above 1 and reopen the equity issuance window. A continuation lower toward $55,000 would force a materially larger Bitcoin sale than the $1.25 billion ceiling currently authorized, and that scenario would likely reprice the entire preferred stack.

El Salvador, by contrast, has continued accumulating Bitcoin under IMF scrutiny, underscoring that not every institutional BTC holder faces the same structural constraints Strategy does. The next signal worth tracking is whether Strategy executes any material BTC sale in the coming two weeks and how the preferred series trades in response.
Don’t Miss Out on Our $1,000 USDT Airdrop on ByBit

Don’t Miss Out on Our $1,000 USDT Airdrop on ByBit

The post appeared first on Cryptonews.

read the full story

Bitcoin Stays Under $60K After a Brutal June Slide and Altcoins Extend Losses

TL;DR Bitcoin entered July below $60,000 after losing about 20% in June, briefly slipping to $58,000…

Bitcoin’s $57K slide puts my $49K cycle-low thesis in play unless bulls reclaim $60K

Bitcoin is close enough to my lower channel levels that the old $49K framework is back in play, but…

Bitcoin options traders load up on $50,000 puts and gold futures flash a death cross

Bitcoin options flows and a record gold OI suggest traders are bracing for further downside rather…

Bitcoin can still fall to $53,000 if the ETF-era floor disappears

Bitcoin is close to losing $58,000, and the test below that level is whether the buyer stack that…

Taiwan Advances Crypto Regulation With New VASP and Stablecoin Framework

Taiwan’s Legislative Yuan passed the Virtual Asset Service Act on its third reading on June…

Citi cuts Bitcoin and Ether targets as ETF outflows deepen

Citi cut Bitcoin and Ether targets as ETF flows turned negative, lowering BTC to $82K and ETH to…

'XRP Ledger Was 15 Years Ahead': Ripple's Ex Chief Engineer Reacts to New Visa-Mastercard Stablecoin

Former Ripple engineer says Visa and Mastercard’s new Open USD consortium validates XRPL…

Bitcoin ETF Outflows Hit $4.3B in June as Institutions Flee Risk

Institutional selling pushed Bitcoin ETF outflows to $4.3B in June 2026, the largest monthly…

Bitcoin ETFs lose record $4.5B in June, eclipsing Strategy's $1.25B raise

US spot Bitcoin ETFs logged a record $4.5 billion in June outflows, pushing year-to-date totals to…

Bitcoin price falls below $59K as June ETF outflows hit record $4.5B

Bitcoin trades near $58,692 after June ETF outflows hit $4.5B, with BTC below key trend levels and…

Bitcoin’s 20% June crash looks even deadlier on the charts. Here’s why

Bitcoin dropped by 20% in June, but the monthly chart reveals something far more concerning.

Trump: $1.4 Billion in 2025 Crypto Earnings as Bitcoin, Ether, Memecoins and World Liberty Populate Filing

President Donald Trump reported at least $1.4 billion in cryptocurrency-related earnings for 2025 in…

Bitcoin Falls Below $58,000 as Quarter-End Selling and Strategy Jitters Deepen 2026 Losses

Bitcoin slid under $58,000 on June 30, closing out its worst quarter in years as quarter-end…

Strategy Overhaul Puts MSTR Buybacks and Bitcoin Sales on the Table

Strategy is moving fast. The company launched a capital restructuring plan aimed squarely at killing…

Live markets: U.S. spot bitcoin ETFs had their worst month ever in June, shedding $4.5 billion

The record outflow beat the previous worst month by 29% and came on nine consecutive days of…

The 8-Week Bitcoin Demand Drought Points to Where the Money Went

Bitcoin (BTC) buyers in the United States have gone quiet. The Coinbase Premium Index, a gauge of US…