Strategy Inc. (NASDAQ: $MSTR) is facing a fresh test of its bitcoin treasury narrative after more than 411 BTC moved from company-linked wallets to Coinbase (NASDAQ: $COIN) Prime, reviving questions about whether the largest public corporate Bitcoin holder may need to use part of its stack as a financing tool.
The transfer has not been confirmed as a sale. Arkham Intelligence data showed two movements of roughly 205.3 BTC and 206.2 BTC from Strategy-associated wallets before the coins reached a Coinbase Prime destination address. Prior transfers have sometimes reflected custody management rather than selling, but the latest wallet path drew closer scrutiny because it came after a broader balance-sheet update.
Strategy recently completed the repurchase of $1.5 billion in 0% convertible senior notes due 2029 for about $1.38 billion in cash. The company said it now holds 843,738 BTC, has $6.7 billion in convertible notes outstanding, and ended May 25 with a $871 million U.S. dollar reserve.
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That reserve is now central to how the market reads the company’s preferred-stock structure. Strategy has leaned on STRC and other preferred instruments as part of its capital machine, raising funds to buy Bitcoin while managing dilution and debt maturities. If preferred shares remain under pressure, the company may have to rebuild cash, raise capital on tougher terms, or consider limited Bitcoin sales without breaking its broader accumulation story.
President and CEO Phong Le said the company had already discussed using the full range of capital tools, including “the disciplined sale of bitcoin,” while Michael Saylor framed the update as evidence of flexibility across cash, equity and credit.
The question now is less about whether Strategy still wants more Bitcoin and more about how much strain its capital stack can absorb while Bitcoin trades near its cost basis.
Strategy Inc. (NASDAQ: MSTR) is currently trading at $159.21 U.S. per share. Bitcoin (CRYPTO: $BTC) is trading at $73,414 U.S. per digital token.
