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The "add more dots" signal worked again.
On June 7, Michael Saylor posted a familiar chart on X showing Strategy's Bitcoin acquisition tracker with the caption "A good time to add more dots." In crypto circles, this phrase has become a reliable pre-announcement signal — and within 24 hours, the 8-K filing confirmed exactly what the market expected.
Between June 1 and 7, Strategy purchased 1,550 Bitcoin for $101.3 million at an average price of $65,332 per coin. The buy brought total holdings to 845,256 BTC, or roughly 4% of the entire Bitcoin supply. To put the numbers in perspective: that single purchase was nearly 50 times the amount of Bitcoin the company had sold just one week earlier. After the previous week's sale of 32 BTC — which triggered an 18% market drop — Saylor more than made up for it.
Market reaction was swift. Bitcoin rebounded 4% from weekend lows near $59,100 and steadied above $63,000 on Monday, with the announcement helping to soothe the market. The company also rebuilt its US dollar reserve to $1 billion, which JPMorgan had flagged as a necessary cushion for preferred dividend payments. The purchase was funded through equity issuance — Strategy sold 1,409,600 MSTR shares for $181 million, then used a portion to buy Bitcoin while restoring its cash buffer.
Despite the headline, the numbers show more nuance. Strategy's average cost per Bitcoin across its entire 845,256 BTC position is $75,680 — meaning at current prices around $63,000, the company sits on an unrealized loss of roughly $10.5 billion. Peter Schiff criticized the buy as dilutive to common shareholders, noting that issuing new shares to fund Bitcoin acquisition expands the share count while existing stockholders' ownership percentage shrinks.
The purchase lands at a crossroads. Strategy controls more Bitcoin than any public company in the world, and its continued buying reinforces a corporate accumulation thesis that other firms are watching closely. But the widening gap between acquisition cost and market price remains a real financial risk.
For traders, the pattern is worth noting. When Saylor posts the dots, history suggests a buy is coming — though the price at which he bought the previous week is just one piece of a much larger position.
This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice.
Always conduct your own research before making any investment decisions.
$BTC
#BitcoinRalliesOver5Percent
During June 1–7, public companies acquired 4,508 BTC (roughly $288 million) and added large ETH positions, according to Lookonchain data. Strategy led the Bitcoin buys with 1,550 BTC purchased at an average price of $65,332, costing about $101 million. Strive also added 32 BTC on the same day. On the Ethereum side, Bitmine acquired 126,971 ETH, valued at approximately $214 million at current prices — its largest single-week accumulation of 2026. The company now holds roughly 5.54 million ETH, representing about 4.59% of Ethereum's circulating supply. Combined, the two companies accounted for just over half of the $575 million total institutional accumulation last week.
DEX Activity Picked Up Sharply
Trading on decentralized exchanges rebounded strongly during the same period. Spot volume rose 64% week-over-week, while perpetuals volume climbed 69%. The surge in on-chain trading suggests renewed engagement from market participants even as prices remained under pressure. Whether this activity translates into sustained momentum depends on whether spot demand follows.
Stablecoin Market Cap Contracted by $3.47 Billion
The total stablecoin market capitalization declined by $3.47 billion last week. The contraction signals liquidity leaving the market rather than waiting on the sidelines for reallocation, which could make a sustained recovery harder to maintain without fresh capital inflows.
Funding Rates Turned Negative
Bitcoin perpetual futures funding rates have moved into negative territory, with the annualized rate near minus 2%. This indicates that bearish traders are now more confident and willing to pay to hold short exposure. When funding rates are negative, shorts are paying longs — a setup that historically has preceded sharp short squeezes if price moves against them.
Where the Short Squeeze Risk Actually Sits
Crowded short positions have accumulated between $63,000 and $66,000. If Bitcoin rebounds toward $66,000, an estimated $2.6 billion in short positions could be forced out. By comparison, a further decline from current levels to $57,000 would put about $1.2 billion in long positions at risk. This asymmetry makes the current range more dangerous for bears than the headline price action suggests.
Technical support sits between $59,000 and $62,000, which aligns with the zone where funding flipped negative. On June 5, Bitcoin briefly fell below $60,000, touching $59,100, before bouncing back above $62,000. The clean test of that support zone and the subsequent recovery confirm its significance.
What This Means for Positioning
The leverage reset has removed much of the crowded long positioning that fueled the prior drawdown. Open interest has fallen substantially, and funding now tilts toward short-heavy. Cleaner positioning means the market is less prone to cascading liquidations on the downside, but it does not replace lost spot demand.
Bitcoin ETF outflows remain a headwind. US spot Bitcoin ETFs posted 13 consecutive days of net outflows through last week, totaling $4.33 billion. Until ETF flows stabilize or reverse, upside conviction will remain limited.
For now, the structure favors a potential relief rally driven by short covering, but sustained upside requires fresh spot demand — which has not yet materialized.
This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Always conduct your own research.
#BitcoinRalliesOver5Percent
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