Key Highlights
- The corporate Bitcoin holder posted a $12.54 billion Q1 net loss tied to unrealized losses amid Bitcoin’s 23.8% quarterly decline
- Michael Saylor indicated Strategy might liquidate portions of its Bitcoin holdings to satisfy dividend requirements
- Strategy’s Bitcoin treasury stands at 818,334 BTC with an average acquisition price of $75,537, currently valued near $66.7 billion
- The firm maintains approximately 18 months of reserves to cover $1.5 billion in yearly dividend and debt commitments
- Shares dropped more than 4% during extended trading; Bitcoin dipped under $81,000 following the disclosure
Strategy, recognized as the largest corporate Bitcoin holder among publicly traded companies worldwide, disclosed a $12.54 billion net loss during the first quarter of 2026. The substantial loss stemmed primarily from paper losses on the company’s cryptocurrency reserves following a 23.8% price decline throughout the quarter.
Executive Chairman Michael Saylor delivered unexpected remarks during the quarterly earnings conference call. He indicated the possibility of liquidating a portion of the company’s Bitcoin treasury to fulfill dividend obligations.
“We will probably sell some Bitcoin to pay a dividend just to inoculate the market and send the message that we did it,” Saylor stated.
This represents the inaugural instance of Saylor publicly discussing Bitcoin sales. The statement appears to contradict his historically firm position against divesting the digital asset.
During a February 2026 interview with CNBC, Saylor projected Strategy would “buy Bitcoin every quarter forever.” He additionally claimed the company could withstand a Bitcoin price collapse to $8,000 levels without requiring asset liquidation.
Strategy maintains a position of 818,334 Bitcoin acquired at an average cost basis of $75,537 per unit. Current market valuation places the total holdings around $66.7 billion.
The corporation faces approximately $1.5 billion in combined annual dividend distributions and debt service requirements. According to Saylor, Strategy possesses roughly 18 months of financial runway using existing USD cash reserves.
He characterized the operational framework as credit-driven: secure financing for Bitcoin acquisitions, allow appreciation over time, then liquidate strategic portions to satisfy financial obligations.
Perpetual Preferred Shares and the Stretch Product
Strategy has deployed dividend-bearing perpetual preferred stock instruments, particularly its Stretch offering, to capitalize recent Bitcoin acquisitions. Stretch provided substantial financing for the 145,834 Bitcoin Strategy has accumulated during 2026.
Saylor expressed ambitions for Stretch to evolve into the “biggest credit instrument in the world.” He projected that expanding assets under management would enhance market liquidity and generate compounding network effects.
Multiple Bitcoin-oriented decentralized finance platforms, including Pendle and Saturn, have initiated tokenization of Stretch’s 11% monthly dividend streams. This development enables on-chain trading of these yields, enhancing market liquidity.
Bitcoin-Collateralized Yield Products Coming Soon
Saylor projected that digital banking platforms will shortly introduce Bitcoin-collateralized yield account products. He suggested these instruments could deliver returns approaching 8%, potentially exceeding typical stablecoin yield offerings.
“Check back in 12 more weeks, I think we’ll have some exciting news,” Saylor remarked.
He observed that approximately three dozen related projects have materialized within recent weeks, a dramatic increase from zero initiatives just two to three months earlier.
Following the earnings announcement, Strategy shares declined 4.33% during after-hours trading sessions, settling at $178.80.
Bitcoin prices also retreated below the $81,000 threshold after the company’s disclosure.
Strategy appears positioned for improved Q2 performance, with Bitcoin rallying nearly 20% to $81,250 since the beginning of April.

