Michael Saylor says the $400 billion AI infrastructure buildout is pulling capital from Bitcoin, but bears see a darker story in the largest corporate holder's first-ever BTC sale.
Michael Saylor says the $400 billion AI infrastructure buildout is pulling capital from Bitcoin, but bears see a darker story in the largest corporate holder's first-ever BTC sale.

Michael Saylor says the $400 billion AI infrastructure buildout is pulling capital from Bitcoin, but bears see a darker story in the largest corporate holder's first-ever BTC sale.
Bitcoin fell 14% to $63,295 in the past week, extending a four-week decline to 22.7%, as Strategy Chairman Michael Saylor attributed the selloff to a historic capital rotation into artificial intelligence.
"Capital markets are funding the AI buildout at historic scale," Saylor said on X. "This is a capital rotation, not a Bitcoin impairment. Volatility creates opportunity."
Saylor pointed to $4 billion in outflows from U.S.-listed spot Bitcoin ETFs since mid-May as evidence of the rotation, with no single day of positive inflows since May 13. Over the past six months, global capital markets have directed roughly $400 billion toward AI infrastructure, according to Saylor's post. The outflows have pushed year-to-date ETF flows into negative territory for the first time in 2026.
The $63,000 level represents a critical psychological support. A breach below $60,000 could accelerate selling, with $1.74 billion in total crypto liquidations over the past 24 hours including $635 million in Bitcoin longs, per Coinglass data.
Saylor's 32-BTC Sale Adds to Bearish Pressure
Strategy's decision to sell 32 BTC for $2.5 million last week — a minuscule fraction of its 843,706 BTC hoard — deepened the selloff, analysts said. The sale marked the first time the largest corporate Bitcoin holder reduced its position, triggering a perception shift among traders. "Even Saylor is selling now," pseudonymous trader QE Infinity said on X.
The company's average purchase price of $75,702 per BTC, based on total spending of $63.87 billion, means Strategy's position sits on an unrealized loss of roughly $11 billion at current prices, according to data from the firm's disclosures. Shares of Strategy (MSTR) have fallen 15% in the past five trading days to around $128, while its preferred stock STRC traded at $95.35, below its $100 par value.
AI Boom: Headwind for Bitcoin, Tailwind for Strategy
The AI infrastructure buildout presents a dual dynamic for Saylor's firm. While capital rotation away from Bitcoin ETFs pressures the company's primary treasury asset, Strategy itself is an enterprise software provider that monetizes AI through its Mosaic platform, which helps businesses deploy large language models with verified data governance.
The broader crypto market has felt the weight of the rotation. Total market capitalization fell 3.1% in the past 24 hours to $2.29 trillion, CoinGecko data shows. Bitcoin dominance has held steady near 58%, suggesting the selloff is broad-based rather than concentrated in altcoins.
The next key test for Bitcoin is the $60,000 support level. Atlas Capital CEO Reza Bundy, backed by economist Nouriel Roubini, warned this week that Bitcoin could see a drawdown of up to 70% within six months if equities suffer a major decline, though he maintained a long-term target of $150,000 to $500,000. The next Federal Reserve meeting on June 17-18 will provide the next macro catalyst, with fed funds futures currently pricing no rate cut.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.