Michael Saylor’s Strategy Adds $1.57B in Bitcoin, Treasury Swells to 761K BTC

BTC3,79%

Strategy announced on Monday that it bought another large tranche of Bitcoin, adding 22,337 BTC, a purchase the company says cost roughly $1.57 billion at an average of about $70,194 per coin, pushing its total holdings to 761,068 BTC. The disclosure, filed as a Form 8-K and shared in a company tweet, gives a fresh snapshot of the aggressive accumulation strategy that has defined the firm’s public identity in recent years.

The latest purchase comes as Bitcoin has regained some footing in March, trading in the low-to-mid $70,000s after a volatile start to the year. Market data show Bitcoin hovering around $73,000 on Monday, a move that traders say has been supported by a mix of geopolitical uncertainty and renewed institutional flows into crypto investment products. Those market conditions, paired with the company’s willingness to raise capital on short notice, helped make the transaction possible.

According to the company’s public disclosures, the acquisition was largely funded through recent ATM sales of preferred stock and other equity issuance, a method the firm has used repeatedly to convert shareholder capital into Bitcoin. The company’s filings and market notices indicate roughly $1.58 billion of proceeds from recent preferred-stock ATM sales were available to fund these purchases. That financing pattern has prompted debate among investors: some applaud the disciplined accumulation of a scarce asset, while others worry about dilution and the risk profile of a company whose balance sheet is increasingly dominated by digital currency holdings.

Corporate BTC Holdings Continue to Grow

The math behind Strategy’s position is striking. The firm says its 761,068 BTC were acquired at an average price of about $75,696 per coin, for an aggregate acquisition cost of approximately $57.61 billion as of March 15, 2026. That average sits above the current spot price, which means the company is carrying a sizable unrealized loss on paper compared with peak levels seen in previous cycles. Still, the management team has repeatedly framed Bitcoin as a long-term store of value and a central asset in its corporate treasury strategy.

The company’s founder and outspoken Bitcoin advocate, Michael Saylor, has been the public face of the strategy, using social media to flag purchases and defend the approach amid market turbulence. Analysts say the latest bolt-on purchase shows two larger trends: ongoing institutional appetite for Bitcoin exposure, and the growing willingness of publicly traded companies to hold crypto as a treasury asset. Opponents counter that concentrating so much of a corporate balance sheet in a single, volatile asset is a speculative bet that could weigh on long-term shareholder value if prices don’t recover.

What happens next for both the company and the broader market will hinge on a range of factors: macroeconomic data, central bank policy, the trajectory of geopolitical events that have been cited by some traders as a reason to seek non-traditional assets, and whether inflows into regulated crypto products sustain. For now, Strategy’s latest purchase is another unmistakable signal that one high-profile public company is doubling down on Bitcoin as the center of its corporate thesis, and that, win or lose, the experiment is far from over.

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