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Live markets: Bitcoin recoups early decline, rising back above $63,000

coindesk.com · Jul 6, 2026 at 07:43

Live markets: Bitcoin recoups early decline, rising back above $63,000
coindesk.com Jul 6, 2026

"Strategy now has a completely different business model," wrote Peter Schiff, a longtime no-coiner and critic of Michael Saylor and his company. "Instead of selling common and preferred stock and issuing debt to buy bitcoin, the new strategy is to sell bitcoin to pay interest and dividends, pay off debt, buy back shares it sold, and hope that bitcoin’s price goes way up."

"You guys who believed selling 32 BTC caused sell-off three weeks ago have some reflecting to do," said Grant Cardone.

"Everyone was worried about Saylor getting liquidated," wrote Jeff Sekinger. "Well this is it. This is what it looks like. They will sell chunks of BTC at a loss to fund their credit products that aren’t backed by cash flow. So if BTC doesn’t appreciate, they will continue selling at a loss."

"I’m on board with the firm moving in this direction, wrote Josh Mandell. "When the usual approach to funding dividends is just selling more shares of common stock, opting to sell a small amount of bitcoin instead essentially behaves like a buyback of the common."

"Strategy just sold ~1.5 months of dividend obligations in one week," said Joe Burnett, an executive with fellow bitcoin treasury company, Strive. "At this pace and with 0% BTC appreciation, today’s dividend obligation is funded until 2056 ... At ~3.4% annual BTC appreciation, today’s dividend obligation can be funded indefinitely."

Finally, there's Strategy CEO Phong Le: "Strategy is evolving from one-way capital issuance to active capital management."

Strategy's sale of just 32 bitcoin in late May (disclosed in early June) sparked a panic-driven plunge that took BTC from $74,000 to $60,000 in a few days.

Executive Chairman Michael Saylor had previously suggested it might be a good idea to "inoculate" the market over the company's intention to possibly fund dividend payments with occasional bitcoin sales.

Markets, however, are responding differently to last week's sale of 3,588 bitcoin (disclosed Monday morning). After a brief dip as the headline hit, bitcoin has returned to very close to its weekend highs, up 1.7% over the past 24 hours.

Funds tracking the Nasdaq 100 — including Invesco's mammoth QQQ, with nearly $500 billion in AUM — will be buyers of SpaceX (SPCX) shares at Monday's closing price as Elon Musk's company gets added to that influential index Tuesday morning.

That may not produce the buying pressure one might imagine, though.

The company sold less than 5% of its shares in its IPO last month. Combined with lockup rules preventing employees from unloading stock, it means only a small fraction of SPCX shares are actually publicly floating, noted Jack Pitcher at the WSJ.

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