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Strategy acquired 8,178 BTC for $835 million, bringing total holdings to 649,870 BTC.
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The firm’s Bitcoin stash is now worth $61.7 billion, with $13.3 billion in unrealised gains.
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CEO Michael Saylor dismissed rumours of BTC sales, reaffirming Strategy’s “buy-and-hold” stance.
The world’s largest corporate holder of Bitcoin, Strategy, has resumed aggressive accumulation of the cryptocurrency with a purchase worth $835 million, even as prices remained volatile and sentiment turned cautious.
In a filing with the US Securities and Exchange Commission on Monday, the company reported buying 8,178 Bitcoin (BTC) at an average price of around $102,100 each.
The acquisition marks a sharp uptick from the firm’s earlier pace of 400–500 coins per week through October and early November.
The latest buy underscores Executive Chairman Michael Saylor’s conviction in Bitcoin as the firm’s core treasury asset, despite the cryptocurrency’s recent pullback.
Bitcoin treasury expands to nearly 650,000 coins
Following the purchase, Strategy now holds 649,870 BTC, valued at roughly $61.7 billion at current prices, based on CoinGecko data showing BTC trading near $94,200.
The company’s cumulative acquisition cost stands at $48.4 billion, implying paper gains of about $13.3 billion.
At that scale, Strategy controls more than 3% of Bitcoin’s total 21 million supply, making it by far the world’s largest corporate holder of the asset.
“₿ig week,” Saylor hinted on X (formerly Twitter) ahead of the announcement, signalling to his followers that another large purchase was imminent.
Despite the buying spree, Strategy’s stock (MSTR) fell more than 16% over the past five days to $197.03 on Nasdaq, reflecting broader weakness in crypto-related equities after Bitcoin’s sharp correction.
Saylor reaffirms commitment, dismisses sale rumours
Last week, Saylor pushed back against speculation that the company had sold part of its Bitcoin holdings.
The rumour originated from a Walter Bloomberg post on X citing Arkham Intelligence data, which later clarified that the on-chain movement reflected wallet reorganisation, not liquidation.
“There is no truth to this rumour,” Saylor said in response.
“We are buying. We’re buying quite a lot, actually, and we’ll report our next buys on Monday morning. I think people will be pleasantly surprised,” he told CNBC.
Just a week earlier, Strategy disclosed it had purchased an additional 487 BTC for $49.9 million, taking its total holdings at the time to 641,692 BTC.
Volatility returns to Bitcoin
Bitcoin’s latest rally came under pressure last week, with the cryptocurrency falling as much as 25% from its October all-time high near $126,000, dropping to a Sunday low of $93,029 before rebounding modestly.
Despite the US government reopening after a record 43-day shutdown, market uncertainty tied to President Donald Trump’s tariff policies and global risk aversion has led to heavy liquidations across digital assets.
Even so, 2025 has marked a pivotal year for corporate Bitcoin adoption, with 194 public companies now holding BTC on their balance sheets, according to Bitcoin Treasuries data.
Other major holders include Marathon Digital (MARA), Twenty One, Metaplanet, and Riot Platforms, all of which have added to their reserves amid growing regulatory clarity under the Trump administration.


