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An interesting situation is developing with Michael Saylor and his company Strategy. Last week, it purchased Bitcoin again for about $330 million, adding 4,871 BTC to its assets. This is not the first time Michael Saylor has demonstrated such determination. Overall, Strategy now controls approximately 767,000 BTC, making it one of the largest corporate players in the crypto market.
I read the figures and understand the scale: the company spent about $58 billion to build this position. The average purchase price is $75,644 per coin. Now, with Bitcoin trading above $80K, the position looks much better than before. But when these purchases were made, the market was volatile, and Michael Saylor was clearly not concerned about short-term price fluctuations.
An interesting point is that this time, financing worked differently. Instead of draining cash reserves, Strategy sold preferred STRC shares. This allowed raising new capital without selling existing assets. This approach shows how companies are seeking creative ways to accumulate cryptocurrency. Michael Saylor clearly views this as a long-term game rather than a speculative deal.
What’s impressive is that despite market pressure, the strategy remains consistent. The company buys during dips, trying to lower the average cost. This is risky, of course, as large fluctuations can seriously impact the balance sheet. But the message it sends is very powerful. When institutional players of this scale continue to enter, it influences overall market sentiment. Michael Saylor is not hiding, not waiting — he is actively positioning Bitcoin as a long-term asset. This could cause other investors to take cryptocurrencies more seriously.