Strategy CEO Sells $11M in MSTR Shares the Same Week Bitcoin Tested $60,000
June 8, 2026
Key Takeaways
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Strategy CEO Phong Le sold 93,738 MSTR shares for $11.1 million on June 5 under a Rule 10b5-1 plan set in May 2024, to cover taxes on vested performance stock units rather than for a discretionary exit.
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The 190,740 PSUs that triggered the tax sale vested at 200% payout after Strategy’s three-year total return ranked in the top quartile of the Nasdaq Composite, rewarding years of outperformance at the worst possible moment.
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Le retains 119,925 shares after the transaction, but with MSTR down 24% on the week and Bitcoin briefly breaking below $60,000, even a routine filing cannot escape the weight of the current moment.
On June 5, Strategy’s President and CEO filed paperwork for the sale of 93,738 shares of MSTR Class A common stock at prices ranging from $114.79 to $125.14 per share. Total proceeds came to approximately $11.1 million.
Bitcoin was hovering just above $60,000 at the time, having briefly broken that level below for the first time in years. Michael Saylor was posting on X about capital rotation and buying opportunities. The juxtaposition was unfortunate for everyone involved.
What the SEC Filing Actually Shows
Strip away the noise and the filing is straightforward. On June 3, Le received 190,740 shares through the vesting of performance stock units (PSUs) after Strategy’s Compensation Committee formally certified that specific performance and service criteria had been met.
Those PSUs paid out at the maximum 200% rate, a direct consequence of Strategy’s three-year total shareholder return ranking in the top quartile of the Nasdaq Composite during a period when MSTR was one of the best-performing stocks on any major US exchange.
Receiving 190,740 shares creates an immediate tax liability. The Rule 10b5-1 instruction letter Le signed in May 2024, two years before any of this week’s volatility existed, dictated that shares would automatically be sold to cover that bill when the units vested.
The filing is explicit: the sale was executed solely to satisfy Strategy’s tax withholding obligations on vested shares. No discretion, no market timing, and no signal of an intended exit.
The 93,738 shares sold at a weighted average of $118 per share covered the tax. Le walked away from the transaction still holding 119,925 MSTR shares, retaining substantial skin in the game on a company whose fortunes are now almost entirely bound to the Bitcoin price.
Strategy’s Own Bitcoin Sale Adds Another Layer
Le’s stock filing did not arrive in isolation. Just days earlier, on June 1, Strategy itself disclosed the sale of 32 Bitcoin between May 26 and May 31 at an average of $77,135 per coin, generating $2.5 million earmarked for STRC preferred stock distributions.
The amount was negligible relative to the company’s 843,706 BTC position, but what it represented was not. It ended a four-year no-sell commitment that had been central to Strategy’s entire investment identity, and it confirmed that the company’s preferred dividend obligations, running between $750 million and $800 million annually across five series of preferred stock, are now shaping Bitcoin treasury decisions in ways that Saylor’s public messaging had never suggested they would.
With Strategy’s cash reserves down from $2.25 billion to $900 million since January, and STRC trading below its $100 par value, the structural pressure on the company is real and documented.
Why the Filing Matters Despite Being Routine
A pre-programmed tax sale should be a non-event. This week it was not, and the reasons are worth understanding separately from the filing itself.
MSTR has fallen roughly 24% over the past seven days, with a beta of 3.47, meaning it swings three and a half times as hard as the broader market. Strategy is sitting on approximately $12 billion in unrealized losses on its 843,706 BTC position. Its cash reserves have declined from $2.25 billion to $900 million since January.
Its STRC preferred stock is trading below par, creating dividend pressure that Grayscale Research flagged publicly this week as a structural feedback risk. A shareholder vote on capital structure is scheduled for June 8.
In that context, any insider transaction, regardless of the dollar amount, becomes a data point that markets will interrogate, regardless of what the paperwork says. The optics of a CEO selling $11 million in stock while the chairman is publicly defending the Bitcoin thesis and the company’s flagship asset is breaking multi-year support levels are simply difficult, even when the legal and financial explanation is entirely benign.
The PSU vesting that created the tax liability also contains its own irony. The 200% payout rate rewarded three years of extraordinary performance. Those were the years when MSTR went from a software company no one cared about to the world’s largest corporate Bitcoin holder, a trade that for a long stretch looked like the most audacious and correct bet in markets.
The reward for that run landed in the worst trading week of 2026. The filing reveals nothing about what comes next. It cannot help what week it landed in.
The post Strategy CEO Sells $11M in MSTR Shares the Same Week Bitcoin Tested $60,000 appeared first on ccn.com.
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