Bitcoin traders blamed Saylor’s 32 BTC sale but larger selling pressure built elsewhere

Strategy’s tiny sale was not big enough to explain Bitcoin’s correction by itself, but it raised a bigger fear of whether corporate Bitcoin treasuries are still permanent holders.

Bitcoin traders blamed Saylor’s 32 BTC sale but larger selling pressure built elsewhere
Image by CryptoSlate
Updated 4 min read

Quick Take

  1. Strategy disclosed a 32 BTC sale in late May to fund preferred-stock distributions, despite still holding 843,706 BTC.
  2. The tiny sale barely moved supply, but it shook traders who viewed Michael Saylor’s company as a permanent Bitcoin buyer.
  3. May’s bigger treasury reductions came from other firms, yet Strategy’s new selling option raises questions about future forced sales.

Bitcoin traders have identified Michael Saylor as a new suspect in the latest sell-off, while the numbers tell a different story.

Strategy disclosed in a June 1 Form 8-K that it sold just 32 BTC between May 26 and May 31 for $2.5 million, at an average net price of $77,135, with proceeds earmarked to fund preferred-stock distributions.

The company still held 843,706 BTC as of May 31, with that sale representing 0.0038% of Strategy's total holdings and roughly 0.014% of Bitcoin's reported daily volume of $17.45 billion on that day.

A sale of that size carries no supply-side weight against a $17 billion daily market, and it lands as a narrative event that cracks a story traders had built their confidence on.

Bitcoin fell below $71,500 after the disclosure, a drop also attributed to Iran-related geopolitical tensions and over $90 million in BTC-tracked futures liquidations, making Strategy's sale one of several.

Strategy Bitcoin sale barely registered in market terms
A horizontal bar chart shows Strategy's $2.5 million Bitcoin sale representing 0.014% of Bitcoin's $17.45 billion reported daily volume on May 31.

The bigger sellers hiding in May

Four other companies accounted for the bulk of public treasury Bitcoin reductions in May, and their combined total dwarfed Strategy's sale.

According to BitcoinTreasuries, public-company Bitcoin reductions totaled roughly 7,500 BTC during the month, with Strategy's 32 BTC counted in the following month's tally because of its June 1 filing date.

Excluding Strategy, MARA cut 3,386 BTC, Core Scientific reduced by 1,990 BTC, Sequans shed 1,481 BTC, and Prenetics exited 502 BTC, a combined 7,359 BTC.

At Bitcoin's May 31 price of $73,579, that reduction carried a face value of roughly $541 million, about 230 times the size of Strategy's sale.

CompanyBTC reductionApprox. value at $73,579 BTCContext
MARA3,386 BTC~$249MLinked to March note repurchase activity
Core Scientific1,990 BTC~$146MBackdated-entry methodology caveat
Sequans1,481 BTC~$109MDebt redemption / treasury strategy unwind
Prenetics502 BTC~$37MFull exit from BTC treasury position
Total7,359 BTC~$541MNot a coordinated May dump

BitcoinTreasuries noted that its May recap used a methodology that incorporated backdated entries and specifically flagged Core Scientific's 1,990 BTC reduction as one that would not have appeared under its previous method.

MARA's larger reduction also traced back to a March disclosure, when the company sold 15,133 BTC between Mar. 4 and Mar. 25 to fund $1 billion in convertible-note repurchases, not a fresh May decision.

Sequans was unwinding a failed Bitcoin treasury strategy to redeem debt, and Prenetics had already authorized a full exit from Bitcoin to redirect capital toward its IM8 health business.

Each reduction had its own logic and timeline, and none reflected a shared judgment that May was a good time to sell.

The net picture from BitcoinTreasuries makes the dump thesis harder to sustain, as public Bitcoin treasury companies added or disclosed 51,000 BTC before the May reductions and 43,500 BTC net after the reductions.

Why Saylor's sale landed differently

The market's disproportionate reaction to 32 BTC reflects Strategy's position as the symbol of corporate permanence in Bitcoin.

Since 2020, Michael Saylor has built that reputation into the company's identity as an accumulator that never distributes and treats every dip as a buying opportunity. That positioning attracted a class of investors who used Strategy as a proxy for conviction that corporations would become structural Bitcoin buyers.

A single sale to meet a preferred-stock distribution obligation left the accumulation thesis intact mechanically, but it introduced a variable that Strategy has ongoing financial obligations, and Bitcoin is the only asset available to meet them.

The follow-on anxiety is rational, even if the immediate reaction was overblown, since Strategy carries debt and preferred stock obligations with fixed distributions.

If Bitcoin prices fall further, the spread between those obligations and the company's ability to fund them through equity issuance or operating cash narrows.

The 32 BTC sale confirmed that the option to sell exists and that management will exercise it under sufficient financial stress.

Traders who built positions on the premise of a permanent buyer now have to price in an occasional seller, and that repricing does not require a large sale to begin.

The correction's actual anatomy

Attributing Bitcoin's more than 12% weekly decline solely to treasury selling misreads the flow data.
US-traded spot Bitcoin ETFs saw roughly $4.4 billion in outflows over the last 13 recorded trading days through June 3.

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Those outflows dwarf Strategy's $2.5 million sale and the combined $541 million in May treasury reductions by an order of magnitude.

Geopolitical tensions tied to Iran added a separate risk-off layer, and futures liquidations exceeding $90 million amplified whatever directional move was already underway.

Bitcoin correction and its flow drivers
A bar chart shows spot Bitcoin ETF outflows of $4.4 billion dwarfing Strategy's $2.5 million sale and $541 million in May treasury reductions.

Strategy's disclosure entered that environment as a narrative accelerant, traders looking for a reason to reduce exposure found one, and the symbolic weight of Saylor selling gave the move a headline that stuck.

Standard Chartered's Geoffrey Kendrick maintained a $100,000 year-end 2026 Bitcoin target after the decline, treating the drawdown as a positioning reset.

That framing holds as long as the ETF outflow cycle reverses and treasury-sector net accumulation continues, and gives way if Strategy or other debt-carrying treasury holders face sustained stress requiring liquidation at scale.

Cartoon showing 32BTC and Michael Saylor in a seller lineup, and traders blaming Strategy’s small BTC sale while larger selling pressure comes from nation-states, whales, ETFs, and corporate treasuries.

What the treasury model now has to prove

If the market absorbs that small tactical sales can fund obligations without ending the accumulation thesis, Strategy's June 1 disclosure becomes a governance footnote.

Net treasury accumulation of 43,500 BTC in May, continued ETF inflows once the current outflow cycle exhausts itself, and Standard Chartered's unchanged price target all support that reading.

Bitcoin stabilizes, Strategy's premium to net asset value recovers, and the 32 BTC sale gets filed under balance-sheet housekeeping.

If investors reprice the treasury model instead, deciding that firms carrying debt and preferred obligations are conditional buyers, May becomes a template for repeated headline risk.

Every quarterly filing season, every preferred distribution date, every convertible-note maturity creates a window for another small sale that lands with outsized narrative force.

The price correction from that repricing would come from the erosion of the premium investors assigned to Strategy's perpetual-accumulation posture.

Corporate Bitcoin treasuries built their market value partly on the promise of one-way buying, and the 32 BTC sale raised the question of how many times a permanent buyer can sell before the market stops treating it as permanent.

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