What Happens to Bitcoin’s Price if the Biggest Corporate Buyer Becomes a Seller?Bitcoin’s next major leg down might not come from miners, ETF exodus, macro data, unknown large whales, or even wars and worsening economic conditions. Instead, it could be from the market’s largest and most famous corporate BTC buyer if it indeed turns into a recurring seller, as many critics and experts fear.
As such, we decided to ask ChatGPT about its take on the matter: how viable is the threat, and how low can BTC go if Strategy indeed begins disposing of some of its crypto holdings to pay off dividends or other expenses?
Is Strategy a Threat to BTC’s Price?
Consistent crypto critic Peter Schiff is not the only person who has sounded the alarm on Strategy’s strategy (no pun intended) to raise funds through its STRC to accumulate more bitcoin. Just earlier, we reported that a popular crypto analyst, Kaleo, warned that the company would need to sell at least 50,000 bitcoin in the next couple of years to fund dividend payments and other expenses.
ChatGPT warned that if the largest corporate holder of BTC indeed starts offloading more significant portions, not just the 32 units it sold several weeks ago, the initial market shock could send the asset tumbling toward multi-year lows at $52,000. That would be just the base-case scenario and first reaction, before a more profound correction driven by a deeper loss of confidence in Strategy’s capital structure could tumble bitcoin toward $45,000.
The popular AI solution noted that it’s highly unlikely that Strategy will offload “hundreds of thousands of coins,” but the real danger for the asset’s price will stem from the narrative shift.
“For years, Strategy was the market’s most reliable corporate buyer of bitcoin. When BTC dipped, investors expected Michael Saylor’s company to raise capital and buy more. That created a psychological floor. If the same market starts believing Strategy must sell BTC to service its own financial instruments, that floor can quickly turn into resistance.”
Why STRC Matters
Also referred to as Stretch, STRC is the company’s variable-rate perpetual preferred stock. Simply put, investors buy STRC for cash yield, while Strategy uses the capital raised through the instrument to support its bitcoin-focused balance sheet. It’s designed around a $100 stated amount.
The company can adjust the dividend rate to keep STRC trading close to that level. When the shares trade near or above $100, the model operates as designed: the company can issue more preferred shares through at-the-market programs, raise cash, buy more BTC, and keep the machine working.
When that $100 par breaks, the structure is in danger. At current prices of under $90, STRC is no longer behaving like a stable high-yield instrument. Instead, it trades at a meaningful discount relative to the level the firm wants to hold, creating several issues.
Strategy’s ability to issue more STRC becomes weaker as selling new shares below the intended $100 zone would violate the product’s design or signal that investors are demanding a much larger discount.
Additionally, the dividend rate may need to rise to attract buyers back. Lastly, instead of using STRC proceeds to buy more BTC, Strategy may have to utilize its cash reserves, common-stock sales, or, as threatened above, BTC sales, to keep dividends current.
The post What Happens to Bitcoin’s Price if the Biggest Corporate Buyer Becomes a Seller? appeared first on CryptoPotato.
read the full story
Bitcoin’s next major leg down might not come from miners, ETF exodus, macro data, unknown large whales, or even wars and worsening economic conditions. Instead, it could be from the market’s largest and most famous corporate BTC buyer if it indeed turns into a recurring seller, as many critics and experts fear.
As such, we decided to ask ChatGPT about its take on the matter: how viable is the threat, and how low can BTC go if Strategy indeed begins disposing of some of its crypto holdings to pay off dividends or other expenses?
Is Strategy a Threat to BTC’s Price?
Consistent crypto critic Peter Schiff is not the only person who has sounded the alarm on Strategy’s strategy (no pun intended) to raise funds through its STRC to accumulate more bitcoin. Just earlier, we reported that a popular crypto analyst, Kaleo, warned that the company would need to sell at least 50,000 bitcoin in the next couple of years to fund dividend payments and other expenses.
ChatGPT warned that if the largest corporate holder of BTC indeed starts offloading more significant portions, not just the 32 units it sold several weeks ago, the initial market shock could send the asset tumbling toward multi-year lows at $52,000. That would be just the base-case scenario and first reaction, before a more profound correction driven by a deeper loss of confidence in Strategy’s capital structure could tumble bitcoin toward $45,000.
The popular AI solution noted that it’s highly unlikely that Strategy will offload “hundreds of thousands of coins,” but the real danger for the asset’s price will stem from the narrative shift.
“For years, Strategy was the market’s most reliable corporate buyer of bitcoin. When BTC dipped, investors expected Michael Saylor’s company to raise capital and buy more. That created a psychological floor. If the same market starts believing Strategy must sell BTC to service its own financial instruments, that floor can quickly turn into resistance.”
Why STRC Matters
Also referred to as Stretch, STRC is the company’s variable-rate perpetual preferred stock. Simply put, investors buy STRC for cash yield, while Strategy uses the capital raised through the instrument to support its bitcoin-focused balance sheet. It’s designed around a $100 stated amount.
The company can adjust the dividend rate to keep STRC trading close to that level. When the shares trade near or above $100, the model operates as designed: the company can issue more preferred shares through at-the-market programs, raise cash, buy more BTC, and keep the machine working.
When that $100 par breaks, the structure is in danger. At current prices of under $90, STRC is no longer behaving like a stable high-yield instrument. Instead, it trades at a meaningful discount relative to the level the firm wants to hold, creating several issues.
Strategy’s ability to issue more STRC becomes weaker as selling new shares below the intended $100 zone would violate the product’s design or signal that investors are demanding a much larger discount.
Additionally, the dividend rate may need to rise to attract buyers back. Lastly, instead of using STRC proceeds to buy more BTC, Strategy may have to utilize its cash reserves, common-stock sales, or, as threatened above, BTC sales, to keep dividends current.
The post What Happens to Bitcoin’s Price if the Biggest Corporate Buyer Becomes a Seller? appeared first on CryptoPotato.
read the full story14 AI Models Including Claude, ChatGPT and Grok Predict Bitcoin’s Price Outlook
The price of bitcoin is down 40% over the last year and has spent the past week trading between…
Is This the Hidden Reason Behind Bitcoin’s $23K Collapse in Just 6 Weeks?
One metric has been deep in the red since the massive price correction began in mid-May.
Bitcoin Slips Under $60,000 as Tech Rout, Hawkish Fed Hit Crypto
Ether falls harder than Bitcoin in a market-wide risk-off move, while Aave bucks the selloff on V4…
SBI And Startale Put Yen Stablecoins Back In The Institutional Spotlight
SBI And Startale Put Yen Stablecoins Back In The Institutional Spotlight …
Bitcoin’s Network Is Booming Even as Prices Remain Below Record Highs
Bitcoin usage is surging despite weak prices, as Ordinals and Runes drive network activity while ETF…
‘Pause Bitcoin purchases and rebuild your cash reserve’ – Critics slam Strategy
Will investor confidence be restored by STRC's “self-repairing mechanism?”
Bitcoin nearly loses $59K as DXY surges: Are traders bracing for more pain?
Bitcoin drops toward new 2026 lows as spot BTC ETF outflows and slowing accumulation from Strategy…
'Painful' Bitcoin Sell-Off Drags Ethereum, XRP and Dogecoin Lower as Crypto Stocks Dive
Bitcoin's slide to its lowest point in 21 months slammed the price of leading altcoins, while…
From Volatility to Yield: BASIS.pro Reports Rising Arbitrage Opportunity Flow as Bitcoin Trades Near $62K
Victoria, Seychelles, June 24th, 2026, Chainwire. Following new Base58 Labs market-structure…
XRP Is Down 50%, and a $785 Million Stablecoin May Be Part of the Problem
XRP (XRP) price has fallen 50% over the past year, even as activity on its network climbs toward…
Bitcoin Collapses Below $60K, but Samson Mow Says Everything Is Fine
Offering a rare glimpse of optimism amid the extreme negative sentiment, prominent Bitcoin advocate…
Bitcoin price breaks below $60K support, can bulls prevent a deeper crash?
Bitcoin price has fallen to a make-or-break support zone near $59,000 after losing a key Fibonacci…
Bitcoin retests June low after $850M liquidations rock crypto market
Bitcoin has fallen below $60,000 for a second time this month, triggering more than $850 million in…
5 Market Signals Reveal How AI Stocks, Oil and Bitcoin Shook Wall Street
Markets split sharply on Wednesday as lower oil prices eased inflation fears, but pressure on…
Saylor’s STRC Bitcoin machine is turning shareholders into its cash backstop – causing a dilution trade-off
Strategy (formerly known as MicroStrategy) is discovering that strengthening one part of its…
Portnoy: 'It Seems Like Bitcoin Is Going to Zero'
Barstool Sports founder Dave Portnoy has challenged Bitcoin bulls to prove skeptics wrong.
21Shares Concedes 4-Year Cycle Intact as Bitcoin Falls Below $60,000 Again
21Shares concedes Bitcoin's four-year cycle has not broken as BTC slips below $60,000, yet still…
BlackRock Says Bitcoin Is Maturing — Recommends Up to 2% Portfolio Allocation
TL;DR: BlackRock recommended its financial advisors a Bitcoin allocation of between 1% and 2% as a…