This week, Michael Saylor’s fuss about not selling Bitcoin revealed that he co-founded about never selling Bitcoin, and in fact there may be situations where some of its stockpiles may need to be dropped off.
“The significant decline in Bitcoin Holding’s market value is focused on the Strategy (MSTR) (formerly MicroStrategy) pointed out in its regulatory submission on April 7th. These obligations include $82.1 billion in loans. Major repayments of these loans begin next year. Leasing in office space. According to Protos on Crypto News Site, some investors reported dividends have been paid.
In other words, if the price of Bitcoin is sinking low enough, the strategy has no choice but to sell BTC to earn a substantial debt. This is specific to the strategy business. The company bets are because they bet almost everything on volatile cryptocurrencies (although in the context, Bitcoin is regularly less volatile than some major stocks). Anyway, disclosure contrasts with Saylor’s common refrain. “You don’t sell #bitcoin,” Saylor said in February.
Bitcoin’s biggest corporate holder told investors that as of Monday there was 528,185 BTC alone, with 80,715 (or about 15%) acquired in the first quarter of 2025 block-by-block. The strategy also revealed that its unrealized losses reached $59.1 billion in the first quarter. Meanwhile, major cryptocurrencies have confiscated a significant portion of their value.
Bitcoin rose about 3.7% at noon Friday, rising to $82,556 as of 12:08pm. However, since January 1st, it has still fallen by around 11.7%. Bitcoin prices have fallen below $80,000 several times since March, rocking wild stock markets over President Donald Trump’s volatile tariff policies.
On April 9th, Saylor simply tweeted “Hodl.” This is the term “Hold” and “Hold On for Dear Life” in the crypto scene.
The strategy averaged $67,458 per Bitcoin for the entire stockpile.
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