The recent Bitcoin price decline has sent tremors through the crypto market, but few feel the quake as deeply as Michael Saylor’s Strategy, the software firm turned Bitcoin whale who now faces the uncomfortable possibility of selling its BTC reserves at a loss.

According to a recent regulatory filing, Strategy revealed it may be forced to sell some of its Bitcoin holdings to meet financial obligations, potentially below cost basis.

Strategy warns that a major drop in Bitcoin’s price could hurt its ability to meet financial obligations.

In its filing, the company says it may need to sell $BTC—possibly at a loss—if it can’t raise money through other means. pic.twitter.com/yRTpuxwUP9

— Satoshi Club (@esatoshiclub) April 9, 2025

The company currently holds around 528,185 BTC, acquired at an average cost of $67,458, amounting to more than $35 billion in investments.

Yet, with Bitcoin now trading low, close to that level, the firm’s unrealized losses are swelling, approaching $6 billion in Q1 alone.

Strategy has acquired 22,048 BTC for ~$1.92 billion at ~$86,969 per bitcoin and has achieved BTC Yield of 11.0% YTD 2025. As of 3/30/2025, we hodl 528,185 $BTC acquired for ~$35.63 billion at ~$67,458 per bitcoin. $MSTR $STRK $STRFhttps://t.co/qbeAVthyQw

— Strategy (@Strategy) March 31, 2025

Despite a $1.69 billion income tax benefit softening the blow, the financial strain is intensifying.

Strategy’s debt burden stands at $8 billion, with $35 million in annual interest and $150 million in yearly dividends further tightening the noose.

The firm’s software operations no longer generate enough revenue to sustain these obligations, and the long-touted promise of Bitcoin’s perpetual appreciation is being put to a brutal test.

Strategy’s BTC Bet Turns Into a Liability

Strategy’s Bitcoin playbook was initially praised for entering Bitcoin early, ahead of the 2021 bull run; the company expanded its holdings through a mix of convertible debt and equity offerings.

At one point, this fueled massive investor confidence and helped Strategy gain a coveted spot on the Nasdaq 100. But what worked in a rising market now threatens the firm as the tide turns.

As of March 2025, Strategy had acquired 275,965 BTC since November 2024 alone, at an average price of $93,228.

With Bitcoin trading at around $77,000, that tranche alone accounts for nearly $4.6 billion in unrealized losses.

Source: Cryptonews

The filing submitted to the SEC clearly states the pressure. Without fresh funding, either through new equity or debt, the company could be forced to liquidate some of its Bitcoin holdings.

“We may be required to make such sales at prices below our cost basis or that are otherwise unfavorable,” the filing warns.

This reality stands in stark contrast to Michael Saylor’s previous assertions. The co-founder and executive chairman once claimed that even if Bitcoin dropped to $1,000, Strategy wouldn’t be forced to sell.

Michael Saylor says, “It’s not debt, it’s convertible debt. #Bitcoin could go from $100K to $1K, the debt is not going to get called, there is no recourse.” pic.twitter.com/Ljl8PEl8dm

— ₿itcoinTeddy (@Bitcoin_Teddy) February 24, 2025

Wall Street Tensions and Recession Fears Could Fuel Further Bitcoin Price Pressure

Growing concern about a looming U.S. recession, further complicating Strategy’s predicament, adds fuel to the fire.

Goldman Sachs now predicts a 45% chance of a recession in the next year — that’s higher odds than any time during the post-pandemic inflation and interest rate hikes. pic.twitter.com/nPSZqece1m

— Steven Rattner (@SteveRattner) April 7, 2025

Goldman Sachs recently increased the probability of a U.S. recession to 45%, citing escalating trade tensions and weakening global markets.

This marked the second revision in just one week, reflecting increasing anxiety among institutional investors.

Goldman revised its 2025 GDP forecast downward to 1.3%, while J.P. Morgan sees a potential contraction of 0.3%.

BREAKING: As the DOW plunges again, JP Morgan’s Jamie Dimon, just suggested that we are headed towards a recession that he thinks “we will see more credit problems than people have seen in a long time.”

What a complete mess that was totally unavoidable.

TRUMPCRASH! pic.twitter.com/o4NJ1ehk18

— Brian Krassenstein (@krassenstein) April 9, 2025

Morgan Stanley noted that although a recession is not their base case, it is now an increasingly likely bear scenario.

These forecasts matter greatly to Bitcoin and, by extension, to Strategy. In times of economic uncertainty, risk assets like Bitcoin often come under selling pressure.

Compounding this is the Federal Reserve’s ambiguous stance on interest rate cuts.

While Goldman expects three cuts starting in June, traders now anticipate rate reductions in at least four of the five remaining Fed meetings.

China knows that Trump wants lower interest rates.

So instead of responding with tariffs, they are offloading an extra $50 billion in treasuries to push interest rates higher.

China holds $700 billion in US treasuries btw. pic.twitter.com/Y8utulh16R

— ADAM (@AdameMedia) April 8, 2025

Such macroeconomic instability could create further headwinds for Bitcoin, putting Strategy in an even tighter spot.

If BTC slips below Strategy’s average cost basis of $67,000, market sentiment could sour quickly, potentially triggering a wave of panic selling.

In many ways, Strategy now stands at a crossroads. In the coming months, its decision to double down, liquidate, or pivot will most likely determine the firm’s future.

The post Michael Saylor’s Strategy May Need to Sell BTC at a Loss To Cover Debt, What Does This Mean For the Bitcoin Price? appeared first on Cryptonews.

Author