New York, June 2, 2026, 04:12 EDT
Bitcoin dropped under $70,000 on Tuesday, sliding for another session. Traders pointed to Strategy’s first reported bitcoin sale along with heavy ETF redemptions and fresh Middle East worries. The price hovered around $69,900, while ether traded just below $1,980.
Timing was key, not the amount. Strategy disclosed in a June 1 filing it sold 32 bitcoin from May 26 to May 31, bringing in around $2.5 million at a net average of $77,135 per bitcoin. It said the money would go toward paying distributions on preferred stock. Strategy reported holding 843,706 bitcoin as of May 31.
That weighed on one of bitcoin’s main themes lately: consistent institutional buying. U.S. spot bitcoin ETFs, which own bitcoin and trade like stocks, just posted 11 days in a row of redemptions, for about $3.45 billion out the door. That’s the longest outflow stretch since these products started trading in 2024.
Geopolitics weighed again. Iran will stop indirect talks with the U.S., Reuters reported. President Donald Trump said talks are still on. Brent crude was volatile, trading near $94.45 a barrel. Higher energy costs can stoke inflation fears and push traders away from assets with no yield.
Strategy didn’t have to sell on the numbers. The company offloaded about 0.004% of its bitcoin, according to the filing, and it sold 801,994 MSTR shares for $128.3 million using an at-the-market program, which allows for selling stock gradually. Dollar reserves were $900 million.
Analysts are split over what the move means. TD Cowen’s Lance Vitanza called the deal “economically immaterial.” Benchmark’s Mark Palmer said he didn’t expect Strategy to turn bitcoin sales into its main method for paying preferred dividends. But Mark Connors at Risk Dimensions read it differently, arguing the step showed Strategy was willing to back shareholders and creditors, even if that meant selling bitcoin. CoinDesk
Michael Saylor, executive chairman at Strategy, moved past talk of the sale. “Our goal is to make STRC the best credit instrument in the world,” he wrote on X. He was referencing Strategy’s variable-rate perpetual preferred stock, a dividend-paying security with no set maturity. CoinDesk
Crypto losses weren’t just in bitcoin. Ether stayed under $2,000, while XRP dropped 2.75% to $1.26. Solana’s SOL shed 1.17%, according to CoinDesk. Some smaller coins did better, but most of the market dropped.
Derivatives painted a fuzzier picture. Bitcoin open interest hovered at about $19.5 billion, flat from last week. Funding rates for perpetuals stayed positive on several exchanges. Options flows favored calls—traders bought more contracts tied to gains than to declines.
Crypto fund flows were weak again. CoinShares reported $1.67 billion in outflows from digital asset investment products last week, the second-biggest weekly loss of 2026. Bitcoin funds saw $1.44 billion pulled, while Ethereum products logged $257.3 million in withdrawals.
But the risk works both ways. If investors view Strategy’s sale as a one-off event, outflows from ETFs slow, or U.S.-Iran talks cool energy markets, bitcoin may move away from the 32-coin headline. On the other hand, bigger fund redemptions, rising oil prices, or more Mt. Gox creditor distributions after a 10,422-bitcoin wallet moved could give those looking to sell another supply story to work with.
Strategy’s sale isn’t hitting the market with a wave of new supply. Instead, traders seem to be taking it as a sign about demand for bitcoin, which has cooled off from bitcoin ETFs, corporates, and overall risk appetite. The number of coins sold matters less here.