- Strategy Inc. has acquired 171,238 Bitcoin year-to-date, exceeding the roughly 62,000 BTC produced by the entire global mining network over the same period, and representing an estimated 70% of net buying across ETFs, stablecoins, and futures.
- Strategy funds its purchases through STRC, a perpetual preferred stock paying 11.5% annually; its monthly buying cycle is now closely tracked — and traded against — by sophisticated market participants.
- Traditional demand sources have collapsed: spot ETF inflows have dried up, hedge fund arbitrage trades have unwound, retail participation has fallen sharply, and miners are selling every coin to fund AI infrastructure pivots.
- Strategy’s average purchase price of ~$75,700 per Bitcoin sits just below current prices, meaning any meaningful decline threatens the company’s balance sheet, its ability to raise new capital via STRC, and Bitcoin’s price — a self-reinforcing loop that runs just as efficiently in reverse.
What Happened?
Bitcoin is trading just over $77,000, down nearly 30% from a year ago — and the primary reason it has not fallen further appears to be a single company. Strategy Inc., led by Michael Saylor, has bought 171,238 Bitcoin in 2026 alone, outpacing the entire global mining network’s production of roughly 62,000 BTC over the same period. Analysis by 10x Research estimates the company has accounted for approximately 70% of net buying across the major demand categories: ETFs, stablecoins, and futures. Strategy funds this accumulation through STRC, a perpetual preferred stock paying an 11.5% annual cash dividend. In the weeks before each month’s record date, investors accumulate STRC shares, driving the price toward its $100 face value; Strategy then sells new shares at that elevated price and deploys the proceeds into spot Bitcoin. When the record date passes and STRC drifts lower, the buying pauses — until the cycle repeats.
Why It Matters?
Bitcoin was built on the premise of decentralized, distributed demand — a sprawling cast of idealists, speculators, institutional hedgers, and retail traders. In 2026, that premise has quietly collapsed. Spot ETF inflows that defined the 2024 bull run have dried up as the hedge fund arbitrage premium disappeared. South Korean retail trading volumes — a reliable barometer of global speculative appetite — have fallen as local equity markets outperformed. Miners, burned by ill-timed treasury plays last cycle, are now selling every coin to finance shifts into AI hosting. What remains is Saylor and a financial engineering mechanism that is increasingly legible and therefore increasingly traded against. Strategy accounts for up to 20% of total Bitcoin volume in some weeks. The concentration risk this creates is not abstract: Strategy’s average cost basis of approximately $75,700 per Bitcoin leaves only a thin cushion before losses begin eroding STRC’s appeal, which would slow new share issuance, which would remove the bid, accelerating any downturn.
What’s Next?
Saylor has now introduced a scenario in which Strategy might sell Bitcoin — to improve capital structure or increase “Bitcoin per share” — a significant departure from his maximalist philosophy that has given some investors pause. The company’s analyst base argues any sales would be dwarfed by ongoing accumulation, but the shift in rhetoric matters: it removes the unconditional permanence that was part of Strategy’s market psychology. The bull case for Bitcoin breaking out of Strategy’s gravitational pull rests on regulatory clarity unlocking new institutional demand, fresh ETF flows from wealth management platforms, or a macro shock that sends investors toward non-sovereign stores of value. Until one of those catalysts materializes, the asset’s fate is unusually concentrated in the continued ability of one man to raise capital against the asset he is simultaneously the world’s largest buyer of.
Source: Bloomberg













