Key Data & Insights:
- Massive Buy: MicroStrategy (now “Strategy”) bought 21,021 Bitcoin between July 28 and Aug. 3, 2025, spending $2.46 billion—its third-largest purchase ever.
- Average Price: The company paid an average of $117,526 per Bitcoin, just below last month’s record $118,940.
- Total Holdings: MicroStrategy now owns 628,791 BTC, worth over $71 billion at current prices, making it the world’s largest corporate Bitcoin holder by a wide margin.
- Funding Tactics: Saylor funds these buys through a mix of common/preferred share sales and debt, including a new “Stretch” preferred stock offering in July.
- Stock Performance: Since its first Bitcoin buy, MicroStrategy’s stock is up over 3,000%, outpacing both Bitcoin and major indices like the S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100.
- Unrealized Gains: The company reported a $14 billion unrealized gain in Q2, boosted by Bitcoin’s rally and new accounting rules requiring mark-to-market valuation.
What’s Really Happening?
Michael Saylor has turned MicroStrategy from a sleepy enterprise software firm into a leveraged Bitcoin ETF in all but name. The company’s relentless buying—often near all-time highs—has made it a bellwether for institutional crypto adoption and a lightning rod for critics. Saylor’s aggressive capital markets strategy (multiple security types, frequent offerings) is unique among public companies and has inspired a wave of “Bitcoin treasury” imitators.
But the risks are real: Saylor’s promise not to issue new common shares below 2.5x NAV is meant to reassure investors wary of dilution, especially as the company’s market cap trades at a premium to its Bitcoin holdings. Critics like Jim Chanos warn that the complex capital structure and premium pricing could backfire if Bitcoin’s price turns.
Why Does It Matter?
- For Crypto Markets: MicroStrategy’s buys are a major source of demand, often moving the Bitcoin price and setting a precedent for other corporates.
- For Investors: The company’s stock is a high-beta Bitcoin proxy, but with added leverage and dilution risk. Its performance has outpaced Bitcoin, but volatility is extreme.
- For Corporate Treasuries: Saylor’s playbook is being watched by CFOs worldwide as a radical alternative to holding cash or bonds.
What’s Next?
- Will Saylor keep buying at these levels, or pause if Bitcoin corrects?
- How will the market react to further share or debt offerings?
- Will other public companies follow suit, or is this a Saylor-only phenomenon?