Strategy added another 1,550 Bitcoin to its balance sheet this week, a move that may help calm investor concerns sparked by the company’s rare BTC sale days earlier.
The company disclosed it purchased the Bitcoin for roughly $101.3m, bringing its total holdings to 845,256 BTC.
The latest accumulation comes shortly after Strategy revealed it had sold 32 BTC in late May, marking one of the first standalone reductions in its Bitcoin holdings in years.
Although the amount represented only a tiny fraction of the company’s treasury, the sale sparked outsized discussion across crypto markets because of Strategy chairman Michael Saylor’s long-standing “never sell” stance on Bitcoin.
Some traders interpreted the disposal as a possible sign that the company could eventually become a structural seller during periods of market stress.
Rare BTC sale rattled sentiment
Strategy later clarified that the 32 BTC sale was tied to treasury management and preferred share dividend obligations rather than a broader shift away from Bitcoin accumulation.
Still, the move drew attention because Strategy has spent years positioning itself as one of the market’s most aggressive long-term Bitcoin holders.
The company’s latest purchase now appears to weaken speculation that the earlier sale represented a meaningful change in conviction.
Instead, the transactions increasingly resemble active treasury management tied to capital structure and liquidity obligations rather than directional bearishness on Bitcoin itself.
Bitcoin market remains fragile
The controversy also unfolded during a period of heightened market sensitivity for Bitcoin.
BTC recently fell sharply from May highs above $80,000 into the low-$60,000 range before stabilizing near $63,000, according to TradingView data.
The selloff pushed the daily Relative Strength Index [RSI] into deeply oversold territory before rebounding toward the high-20 range, suggesting bearish momentum remains elevated despite the recent recovery attempt.
Trading volume also spiked during the decline, reflecting broader panic positioning and forced liquidations across the market.
That fragile backdrop likely amplified the reaction to Strategy’s small BTC sale, despite the company still controlling one of the largest corporate Bitcoin treasuries globally.
Treasury strategies are evolving
The latest developments also highlight how crypto treasury firms are becoming increasingly sophisticated in how they manage capital, liquidity, and balance sheet obligations.
Rather than functioning as passive “buy and hold forever” entities, companies like Strategy are increasingly operating as active treasury vehicles balancing financing structures alongside long-term crypto accumulation.
Final Summary
- Strategy purchased 1,550 BTC days after a rare 32 BTC sale triggered fears the company could become a structural seller.
- The latest purchase suggests the earlier disposal was likely tied to treasury management rather than a shift away from Bitcoin accumulation.
