Tom Lee calls Strategy’s bitcoin sale classic ‘bottom behavior’

Bitmine (BMNR) chairman Tom Lee calls Strategy’s (MSTR) bitcoin sale classic ‘bottom behavior’

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Bitmine Immersion Technologies chairman said minor sales from key holders and institutional outflows are typical market bottom behaviors rather than structural threats.

By Olivier Acuna|Edited by Jamie Crawley

Updated Jun 2, 2026, 12:53 p.m. Published Jun 2, 2026, 12:05 p.m. 2 min read

  • Tom Lee of Bitmine Immersion said recent bitcoin market anxiety, including Strategy’s small bitcoin sale, is typical behavior at a market bottom rather than a sign of deeper trouble.
  • The sale of 32 bitcoin for about $2.5 million represented just 0.004% of his firm’s more than 843,700 BTC holdings, and Wall Street analysts largely view the move as economically immaterial.
  • Despite an 11-day, $3.4 billion outflow streak from U.S. spot bitcoin ETFs, Lee said his firm’s broader strategy is unchanged and that its aggressive accumulation of ether remains on track.

Market anxiety surrounding recent institutional shifts and insider moves is merely typical bottom behavior, Bitmine Immersion (BMNR) Tom Lee told CoinDesk.

Lee dismissed the idea that Strategy selling 32 BTC signals trouble.

“Michael said he was planning to sell bitcoin, so he’s following through on what he was going to do,” Lee said in an interview on Tuesday. “At the end of the day, he’s still got 99.99% of his bitcoin, and he only makes money if bitcoin goes up.”

Saylor’s decision to sell bitcoin at an average price of $77,135, generating roughly $2.5 million to help fund preferred stock dividend payments, sparked unease. The transaction marked the corporate giant’s first bitcoin sale in nearly four years and prompted questions about whether one of the asset’s most prominent institutional advocates was changing course.

The firm still holds more than 843,700 BTC, meaning the disposal represented a microscopic 0.004% of its total reserves. Analysts across Wall Street have largely agreed that the transaction was economically immaterial to the core accumulation thesis.

Lee’s comments come alongside broader industry unease following the longest outflow streak (11 consecutive days) since U.S. spot exchange-traded funds (ETFs) debuted in January 2024, worth $3.4 billion. Lee pointed out that these capital exits are a classic trailing indicator of a market cycle resetting.

“This is what you expected at the bottom,” Lee explained. “People sell at the bottom, right?”

Despite short-term negative price pressure and market panic, Lee confirmed that Bitmine’s broader macroeconomic playbook remains unchanged, including its ongoing strategy for other major layer-1 assets.

Lee also confirmed that the firm’s existing accumulation plans for ether (ETH) remain “on track.)

Bitmine ramped up ETH purchases last week, making its most significant since December. It bought 111,942 ether (ETH) worth around $237 million at current prices. That lifted the firm’s holdings to almost 5.4 million ETH, about 4.47% of ether’s circulating supply.

Read more: Saylor’s Strategy sold bitcoin for the first time since 2022. These firms are still buying

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