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Saylor continues to buy below cost: institutional capital flow is rewriting the BTC market rules
What Does Michael Saylor’s Recent Add-Position Actually Mean?
Michael Saylor announced that Strategy purchased 4,871 BTC for $67,718, below its average cost basis of $75,644. This isn’t just routine disclosure—it’s redefining the pricing logic: the market-dominant force is shifting from “watching the four-year cycle” to “watching institutional capital flows.” This tweet received over a million impressions on Crypto Twitter, with the discussion centering on two points: institutions continuously accumulating and retail staying on the sidelines. @david_eng_mba pointed out that BTC’s correlation with tech stocks has dropped sharply—β has fallen from about 3 to near 0—making Bitcoin increasingly resemble an independent asset class. @realtommybibi noted that on-chain fees have touched the lowest level since 2011; retail looks weak, but whales are still buying.
But there’s a problem here: Strategy’s concentration of corporate-held BTC is already uncomfortably high. Over the past 30 days, non-Strategy companies only increased their holdings by about 1,000 BTC, while Strategy added 45,000 BTC. On one hand, this concentration tightens supply (good for long-term holders); on the other, it creates potential issues for equity liquidity in MSTR and STRC. After the announcement, BTC briefly touched $69,480 (+4.1%), and MSTR was up 3.9% pre-market. But on an hourly basis, the data show the price surged above $70k and then pulled back—crowded positioning plus macro shocks can easily spell trouble.
In equities: beliefs and dilution are in a tug-of-war
Strategy recorded $14.5 billion in unrealized losses in the first quarter (hedged in part by using $2.42 billion of tax assets), which reveals another side of the trade: “high-conviction bets” via STRC issuance are turning into a “continuous dilution machine.” On Twitter, @astronomer_zero took profits on longs above $70,000. @AdamBLiv used a power-law model to map out Metaplanet’s similar path, pointing to potential 19x returns by 2033. If BTC goes sideways, the ~11.5% dividend burden of STRC may ease, which also helps Strategy absorb the bank credit inflows Saylor emphasizes. On positioning, I’m bullish on BTC, but I’ll hedge MSTR—given the current pace of accumulation, the equity premium of 1.09x mNAV looks too low. Saying “the cycle is dead” is still too early; the halving mechanism remains effective, but the dominant variable now looks more like capital inflows.
Conclusion: Strategy’s add-position again confirms that “institutional capital flows” have become the center of gravity for Bitcoin. Long-term holders benefit the most. Traders still using the “old cycle” playbook are about to play another round. If you want to bet on BTC reaching $100k+ through the “corporate treasury allocation” path, you’re still early right now. Capital that ignores concentration risk is exposing itself to structural risks.
Summary: The narrative dominated by institutional accumulation is still in its early stage; long-term BTC holders and funds willing to tolerate mid-course volatility are in a better position. For active traders, if they keep using an old-cycle framework, their win rate is declining. Compared with simply holding BTC directly, the risk-reward profile of MSTR/STRC is weak at this stage—unless you can effectively hedge dilution and liquidity shocks.**