
Blockstream CEO Adam Back said concerns over Strategy’s small Bitcoin sale are overblown, framing the move as normal treasury management rather than a warning sign for the company’s Bitcoin plan.
Summary
- Adam Back said Strategy’s small Bitcoin sale showed balance sheet flexibility, not bearish treasury change.
- Strategy sold 32 BTC for about $2.5 million to fund preferred stock dividend payments due.
- Crypto.news later reported Strategy bought 1,550 BTC, keeping its accumulation story active for now again.
Speaking in a Bloomberg interview shared on YouTube, Back addressed questions about Strategy selling 32 BTC to help pay preferred stock dividends. He said the sale showed the firm could meet obligations while keeping Bitcoin at the center of its balance sheet.
Back frames sale as balance sheet use
Back argued that the market should not treat the 32 BTC sale as a bearish signal. In his view, Strategy used a small part of its Bitcoin position to support investor payments and reduce pressure on the capital structure.
He also said the move showed how Bitcoin can function inside a corporate treasury. Rather than showing weak conviction, it showed that a company can hold Bitcoin, raise capital against it and use a limited amount when cash needs arise.
Back’s argument also places the sale inside a larger shift in corporate Bitcoin finance, where companies use BTC alongside preferred shares, debt, common equity, and market tools today.
Strategy’s first sale drew attention
As previously reported by crypto.news, Strategy disclosed on June 1 that it sold 32 Bitcoin between May 26 and May 31 at an average price of $77,135. The sale raised about $2.5 million.
The filing said proceeds were expected to fund distributions on the company’s preferred stock. The sale represented about 0.0038% of Strategy’s Bitcoin holdings at the time, but it drew attention because Michael Saylor had long promoted a “never sell” message around Bitcoin.
Crypto.news later reported that Saylor separated personal investor advice from corporate treasury actions. “I said to YOU never sell your bitcoin,” Saylor said at BTC Prague.
Preferred dividends remain in focus
The debate centers on Strategy’s preferred stock model. Preferred shares can give investors yield, but they also create recurring cash needs that the company must meet through cash reserves, equity issuance or limited Bitcoin sales.
Strategy’s STRC preferred stock has faced pressure after falling below its $100 par value. As crypto.news reported, Saylor defended the company’s Bitcoin-backed strategy and said its Bitcoin and cash reserves still exceeded outstanding debt by about $48 billion.
Some critics argue that dividend obligations could become harder to manage if market conditions weaken. Supporters say the 32 BTC sale showed Strategy has several funding tools and does not need to abandon its long-term accumulation plan.
Strategy remains a net accumulator
The sale did not stop Strategy from buying more Bitcoin. Crypto.news reported that the company later bought 1,550 BTC for $101.3 million, lifting its holdings to 845,256 BTC after the sale disclosure.
That purchase was nearly 50 times larger than the 32 BTC sale. It helped support Back’s view that the transaction was not a broad retreat from Bitcoin.
Saylor has also argued that Bitcoin does not need staking or protocol-based yield. In a separate post covered by crypto.news, he framed Bitcoin as the base layer for credit, money, yield and equity products.
For now, the issue is not whether Strategy still wants Bitcoin. The question is how it funds preferred dividends while keeping investor trust and managing balance sheet risk.


