Home » JPMorgan: Strategy’s $1.7 Billion Dividend Bill Could Force More Bitcoin Sales

JPMorgan: Strategy’s $1.7 Billion Dividend Bill Could Force More Bitcoin Sales

JPMorgan: Strategy's $1.7 Billion Dividend Bill Could Force More Bitcoin Sales 1

A $1.7 Billion Question

JPMorgan said the crypto market’s second-half performance will hinge in part on how Strategy Inc. (Nasdaq: MSTR) funds its roughly $1.7 billion in annual dividend obligations, framing the funding plan (alongside the fate of U.S. crypto legislation) as a central variable for the months ahead.

The concern follows a symbolic but closely watched move as Strategy sold 32 BTC between May 26 and May 31, generating about $2.5 million at an average price of $77,135, its first disclosed bitcoin sale since 2022. JPMorgan described the transaction as small and voluntary but said it raised the question of whether the company might keep selling bitcoin to cover distributions.

JPMorgan: Strategy's $1.7 Billion Dividend Bill Could Force More Bitcoin Sales 2

JPMorgan analysts said Strategy may need to replenish its dollar reserves to ease concerns about future bitcoin sales tied to dividend obligations.

Executive Chairman Michael Saylor had long preached a “never sell” philosophy, making even a token disposal a symbolic break. On the company’s first-quarter earnings call, he had telegraphed the move, saying Strategy would “probably sell some bitcoin to pay a dividend just to inoculate the market and send the message that we did it.”

The amount was trivial relative to the balance sheet, given the 32 BTC represented roughly 0.0038% of the firm’s holdings. As of May 31, Strategy held 843,706 BTC acquired for about $63.87 billion, an average of $75,699 per coin. Bitcoin.com News reported that following the sale, MSTR shares fell about 7% as the crypto community clashed over its meaning.

For Saylor, the logic was to demonstrate to rating agencies and investors that the bitcoin stash can serve as usable capital for dividends without forcing a fire sale. For skeptics, even a tiny sale punctures the “diamond hands” narrative and invites questions about what happens if the dividend math tightens further.

Legislation and the Bigger Picture

JPMorgan tied Strategy’s situation to a broader, more cautious view of digital assets. The bank lowered its outlook and now sees less than a 50% chance that the Digital Asset Market Clarity (CLARITY) Act becomes law this year, citing a narrowing congressional window ahead of the midterm elections and an unresolved fight over whether stablecoins can pay yield.

That matters because clear federal rules have been widely cast as a potential catalyst for the next leg of institutional adoption. A stalled CLARITY Act removes one of the more bullish near-term scenarios, leaving company-specific risks like Strategy’s funding plan to weigh more heavily on sentiment.

Even so, JPMorgan does not expect Strategy to retreat with the bank projecting the firm’s bitcoin purchases to reach about $32 billion in 2026, suggesting it views the late-May sale as an exception rather than the start of a trend.

The immediate test in the future is how Strategy funds its next round of dividends, because if it leans on dollar reserves or fresh capital raises, the “will they sell more bitcoin?” question fades. If it returns to the market with another disposal, even a small one, renewed scrutiny of the model that made Strategy the largest corporate holder of bitcoin can be expected.

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