A trader on the decentralized prediction market Polymarket lost about $527,000 in a single day after Strategy disclosed its first bitcoin sale since 2022, per Lookonchain.
Polymarket Trader Loses $527K as Strategy's First Bitcoin Sale Since 2022 Settles a Heated Bet

Key Takeaways
A Bet Settled by an SEC Filing
A Polymarket trader identified onchain as ‘willo2’ lost around $527,000 in a day after Strategy’s bitcoin sale was made public. The wager sat in a market over whether the company would sell any of its bitcoin before May 31, a question that looked settled to many right up until the filing landed.

Polymarket is a decentralized prediction market where users buy and sell shares that pay out based on the outcome of real-world events, from elections to corporate actions. Prices on each contract move with the crowd’s estimate of the probability, so a trader who is positioned on the wrong side of a sudden, confirmed outcome can see a large position wiped out almost instantly.
That is what played out here. When Strategy’s sale surfaced through a regulatory filing, the market resolved against the trader’s position, and the loss was realized in a single day, once again serving as a reminder that prediction markets, for all their use as forecasting tools, are also leveraged venues where outsized conviction can turn expensive fast.
Strategy’s First Sale Since 2022
The event that triggered the loss was itself a notable one. Strategy (Nasdaq: MSTR), the largest corporate holder of bitcoin, disclosed in a Form 8-K dated June 1 that it had sold 32 BTC for about $2.5 million, its first bitcoin sale since 2022. The company said the proceeds would help fund distributions on its preferred stock.
For a firm that holds hundreds of thousands of coins, the sale was tiny in dollar terms but the overarching significance was symbolic as chairman Michael Saylor had long emphasized a strategy of accumulating bitcoin and not selling. As Bitcoin.com News reported yesterday, the sale hit market sentiment badly, causing BTC to topple and slide close to $69,000.
Saylor has since broken his silence, not by addressing the bitcoin transaction itself but by promoting his company’s preferred-stock program.
What the Episode Signals
The loss is unlikely to dent Strategy’s broader treasury thesis, and analysts have largely agreed the 32 BTC sale might be immaterial in the larger scheme of things. However, undeniably, the move has sharpened a question that will follow the company for the foreseeable future, i.e. whether funding preferred-stock dividends will become a recurring reason for Saylor and co. to sell small amounts of bitcoin.
For prediction-market users, the takeaway seems to be narrower and more immediate, showing that a single 8-K can resolve a market in minutes, and positions built on the assumption that a high-profile holder will never sell carry more risk than the odds suggest. The next corporate filing could just as easily move the line again. Only time will tell.
















