Massive put buying triggers sell-off in MicroStrategy, impacts Bitcoin

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Michael Saylor built his entire reputation on one idea: never sell the Bitcoin. On June 1, 2026, that idea officially had an asterisk.

Strategy, the company formerly known as MicroStrategy, disclosed it had sold 32 BTC between May 26 and May 31, netting roughly $2.5 million at an average price of $77,135 per coin. The purpose was not strategic rebalancing or profit-taking. It was to cover preferred stock dividends. The market noticed immediately.

MSTR shares dropped more than 5% in early trading on June 1. Bitcoin fell roughly 2%, hitting its lowest point since mid-April. And in the options market, traders were already positioned for the pain, with put buying surging well before the opening bell.

What actually happened in the options market

At 9:30 a.m. ET on June 1, a wave of put buying hit MSTR options with notable force. Puts were outpacing calls by more than 2 to 1 on elevated volume.

Much of that activity was connected to the YieldMax Short MSTR Option Strategy ETF, ticker WNTR, a fund designed to profit when MSTR declines.

The sale itself was almost comically small in isolation. Thirty-two Bitcoin represents approximately 0.0038% of Strategy’s total holdings, which sit somewhere above 843,000 BTC. Selling 32 coins to cover dividends is roughly equivalent to a person with a $1 million savings account breaking a $20 bill. The math is not the problem.

The symbolism is.

Why Saylor’s ‘never sell’ doctrine mattered so much

The company holds roughly 843,000 to 846,000 BTC at an average cost basis of approximately $75,699 per coin. With Bitcoin trading below that level at the time of the sale, Strategy’s flagship asset was technically underwater relative to what the company paid for it. That detail matters for two reasons.

First, it means any future dividend shortfall cannot be covered by selling Bitcoin at a profit. Every sale at current prices locks in a loss on those specific coins. Second, it raises questions about whether the preferred stock dividend structure, which was designed during a period of much higher Bitcoin prices, is actually sustainable in a prolonged flat or down market.

During the same May 26 to May 31 window, Strategy raised $128 million through common stock issuance. The company sold shares to raise cash while simultaneously selling Bitcoin to cover obligations. Running both levers at once signals that the existing cash flows are not covering the company’s commitments on their own.

What this means for investors watching MSTR and Bitcoin

MSTR’s stock has faced significant year-to-date pressure heading into this period, with declines ranging from roughly 31% to 67% depending on the measurement window. A stock that is already down that sharply, now facing a broken narrative and a cost basis that sits above current Bitcoin prices, gives bearish traders exactly the kind of setup they look for.

For traders specifically, the options activity on June 1 is a signal worth taking seriously. When puts are running 2 to 1 over calls on meaningful volume, the market is not confused. It has a view. Whether that view proves correct depends on where Bitcoin goes from here and whether Strategy needs to tap its holdings again to meet future dividend cycles.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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