The distinction hinges on the specific purpose of the asset sales. While the $1.25 billion program covers sales intended to bolster the company’s USD reserves, liquidations used to fund preferred stock distributions operate outside this ceiling. An 8-K filing confirms that as of July 5, the full $1.25 billion capacity remained untouched, despite the company offloading 2,225 Bitcoin for $135.2 million during the first week of July.
These sales, combined with a late-June transaction of 1,363 Bitcoin, brought total recent divestments to approximately $216 million. The funds were used to satisfy dividend obligations tied to Digital Credit securities, leaving the firm with 843,775 Bitcoin and $2.55 billion in cash reserves. This structure signals a shift in how investors must evaluate the company's treasury; rather than viewing the $1.25 billion as a hard limit on all selling activity, market participants are now forced to parse which transactions serve operational dividend needs versus those meant for general balance-sheet replenishment. With the company reporting an $8.32 billion loss on digital assets for the quarter ending June 30, the sustainability of this dividend model remains a focal point for institutional scrutiny.

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