
Strategy CEO Phong Le Sells Shares Amid Ongoing Bitcoin Accumulation Strategy
Phong Le, president and CEO of Strategy (formerly MicroStrategy), sold 3,299 shares of the company’s Class A common stock this week, a transaction disclosed in a recent filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). The shares were sold at an average price of $138, generating proceeds totaling more than $456,000.

In the same period, Le also acquired 7,320 MSTR shares through the exercise of restricted stock units (RSUs), a common form of executive compensation that vests over time. Strategy’s stock closed Wednesday at $139, up 2% for the day, though it slipped 2% at Thursday’s market open and has declined approximately 8% year-to-date, according to data from Yahoo Finance.
Contextualizing the Sale: Compensation and Portfolio Management
Le’s total compensation package is heavily performance-linked, with such components accounting for 93.6% of his pay, tying his earnings directly to the company’s stock performance and, by extension, the price of Bitcoin. The sold shares originated from vested RSUs, a standard mechanism for delivering equity compensation.
Notably, days before this sale, on March 19, Le purchased approximately 2,500 shares of Strategy’s perpetual preferred stock (STRC) for about $250,000. This simultaneous sale of common stock and purchase of a related, higher-yield security suggests portfolio rebalancing or diversification within his holdings, rather than a signal of diminished confidence in the company’s core strategy.

Strategy’s Aggressive Bitcoin Accumulation Plan
The Virginia-based enterprise software firm remains a dominant institutional holder of Bitcoin. As of its latest disclosures, Strategy holds 762,099 BTC, currently valued at around $53 billion, positioning it to potentially surpass BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust in total holdings.
To fund its ambitious goal of accumulating one million Bitcoin by the end of 2025, Strategy has announced multiple at-the-market (ATM) equity and preferred share programs, totaling over $44 billion in potential capital-raising capacity. Proceeds from these programs are designated for both corporate operations and the purchase of additional digital assets, accelerating its “Bitcoin treasury” strategy.
Disclosure: This article was edited by Vivian Nguyen. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.


