POST: Saylor said the quiet part out loud on the Q1 call.
Strategy, the largest corporate BTC holder on the planet, posted a $12.54B loss for the quarter. Holdings sit at 818,334 BTC at an average cost of $75,537. And on the call, Saylor floated selling some of that stack to cover the dividend.
His exact line: "We will probably sell some bitcoin to pay a dividend just to inoculate the market and send the message that we did it."
Inoculate. Interesting word choice. You only inoculate against something you think is coming
Strategy has roughly $1.5B in annual dividend and interest obligations between the preferred stock and the debt stack. They've got around 18 months of USD reserves to cover that. After that, the options are: issue more equity (dilutes shareholders), issue more debt (already levered), or sell the BTC.
The thesis was always "buy with credit, let it appreciate, never sell." That was the whole pitch. Saylor on every podcast for three years saying he'd never sell. Now we're at "we'll sell a little to send a message."
MSTR down 4%+ after hours. BTC under $81K.
This is the same trap that ate DeFi 1.0. You can't pay real obligations with an appreciating asset unless you're willing to sell the appreciating asset. Olympus learned it. Terra learned it harder. Every protocol that promised yield denominated in its own token eventually had to choose: print more, sell reserves, or default on the promise.
Strategy isn't a DeFi protocol. But the structural problem is identical. Liabilities are in dollars. Assets are in volatile collateral. The only thing keeping the model intact is BTC going up faster than the dividend obligations compound.
The contrast that's been on my mind lately is fee based models versus appreciation based models. SushiSwap stakers get 0.05% of every swap across 40+ chains. The yield is modest, sometimes uninspiring, and it's denominated in SUSHI which has done badly (SUSHI went from $23 in 2021 to around $0.25 today, anyone who staked at $5 has watched fees compound while the underlying got crushed). But the dollars flowing to xSUSHI come from actual trading activity, not from selling treasury or printing new tokens. When volume is low, the yield is low. When volume picks up, it picks up. It's honest in a way that "credit-funded BTC accumulation" isn't.
Saylor's model worked beautifully when BTC was ripping. The question was always what happens in a flat or down year. Now we have a partial answer. You sell some BTC and you call it inoculation.
A few things :
How much do they actually sell, and on what cadence. A one time symbolic sale is different from a quarterly drip.
Whether other corporate treasuries (Metaplanet, Semler, the smaller copycats) follow. If Saylor blinks first, the smaller players have less cover to keep "never selling."
What this does to the BTC supply narrative. The "corporate treasuries are absorbing supply forever" thesis has been a meaningful part of the bull case since 2024.
Whether the preferred stock holders get nervous. Those dividends are the contractual part. Common shareholders eat dilution. Preferred holders expect to get paid.
I'm not calling a top. I'm not saying Strategy is in trouble next quarter. They've got 18 months of cash and Saylor has talked his way out of worse spots before.
But the "infinite money glitch" framing always rested on never having to sell. The moment selling is on the table, even a little, the whole structure starts looking like a leveraged BTC fund with a dividend obligation rather than a perpetual motion machine.
Saylor just admitted Strategy might sell BTC to pay dividends. The whole "infinite money glitch" thesis is cracking now !
byu/Legitimate_Aerie_606 inbtc
Posted by Legitimate_Aerie_606