Why Michael Saylor Says Bitcoin Is On Sale Now
Michael Saylor has framed the latest drawdown as a buying window, emphasizing his balance-sheet approach of accumulating Bitcoin through volatility. The characterization aligns with his multi-year pattern of converting corporate capital into digital assets rather than timing price inflections.
As reported by MarketWatch, the company recently sold additional common shares to purchase roughly $40 million of Bitcoin even while its cumulative position was cited as being over $8 billion in the red. That continued buying amid unrealized losses underscores why he describes the market as discounting an asset he intends to hold for the long term.
Why It Matters For Investors And Strategy (MSTR) Today
According to Simply Wall St, Strategy (formerly MicroStrategy) marked its 100th Bitcoin purchase by adding 592 BTC for about $39.8 million, funded via at-the-market common stock sales. The same note said MSTR fell 7.6% over the week and characterized the company as a highly leveraged Bitcoin treasury vehicle where fresh equity issuance directly impacts Bitcoin exposure per share and dilution risk.
In practical terms, this setup can cause the stock’s valuation to diverge from the value of Bitcoin per share, particularly when new capital is raised into price weakness. That dynamic is central to the debate over whether to gain exposure via MSTR, spot Bitcoin, or a spot ETF, since each route carries different tracking, fee, dilution, and governance trade-offs.
For contextual price background at the time of this writing, Coinpaper reported Bitcoin trading near $63,000 alongside Strategy’s unrealized loss of about $9.5 billion and total holdings of 717,722 BTC. These figures help explain why supporters argue the drawdown represents accumulation territory in a long-horizon thesis.
Industry voices have differed on the merits of the approach; some emphasize the long view and the goal of maximizing BTC ownership over cycles before evaluating outcomes. “He has an eye on the far future, and he’s just trying to buy as much Bitcoin as he can,” said Adam Back, CEO of Blockstream.
How Strategy Funds Buys: Equity, Preferred Stock Issuance, Leverage
AOL reported that to offset Bitcoin-linked performance pressure, the company has turned to large preferred-stock issuance, a tactic that has been characterized as risky. Preferreds add fixed claims to the capital structure, potentially lowering financing costs versus common equity in some markets but raising sensitivity to drawdowns if the asset underperforms.
MarketWatch also noted the use of common equity, selling additional shares to fund approximately $40 million of new Bitcoin purchases despite significant unrealized losses. Taken together, preferreds and at-the-market equity can expand the balance sheet faster than operating cash flow would allow, but they also introduce dilution for existing shareholders and amplify outcomes: gains can compound faster in rising markets, while losses and valuation gaps versus Bitcoin per share can widen in falling markets.
From a risk perspective, investors typically monitor three mechanics in this model: issuance pace relative to market liquidity, the cost of capital embedded in preferreds versus common stock, and the degree to which leverage and dilution alter per-share Bitcoin exposure over time. None of these guarantee an outcome; they simply shape how quickly the balance sheet scales with the cycle and how far MSTR’s market price may diverge from its underlying Bitcoin exposure in either direction.
| Disclaimer: The information provided in this article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial, investment, legal, or trading advice. Cryptocurrency markets are highly volatile and involve risk. Readers should conduct their own research and consult with a qualified professional before making any investment decisions. The publisher is not responsible for any losses incurred as a result of reliance on the information contained herein. |






