Michael Saylor’s firm Strategy, the world’s largest publicly listed corporate holder of Bitcoin, did not add to its BTC holdings last week as the cryptocurrency’s price dipped below $87,000.
In a filing with the US Securities and Exchange Commission on April 7, Strategy
The decision followed a week of heightened market volatility, with BTC surging to as high as $87,000 on April 2 after starting the week at around $82,000,
Bitcoin price from March 31, 2025, to April 6, 2025. Source: CoinGecko
BTC fell below $80,000 on April 6, a significant discount from the average BTC price of
In the period from March 31 to April 6, Strategy also did not sell any shares of class A common stock, which it tends to use for financing its Bitcoin buys, the filing stated.
As of April 7, Strategy held an aggregate amount of 528,185 Bitcoin bought at $35.63 billion, or at an average price of 67,458 per BTC, it added.
An excerpt from Strategy’s Form 8-K report. Source: SEC
“Our unrealized loss on digital assets for the quarter ended March 31, 2025, was $5.91 billion, which we expect will result in a net loss for the quarter ended March 31, 2025, partially offset by a related income tax benefit of $1.69 billion,” the filing added.
While Strategy avoided buying Bitcoin last week, its co-founder and former CEO, Saylor, continued posting about the crypto asset’s superiorship on social media.
“Bitcoin is most volatile because it is most useful,” Saylor wrote in an X post on April 3, soon after BTC tumbled from the intra-week high of $87,100 on April 2 below $82,000, following the
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“Today’s market reaction to tariffs is a reminder: inflation is just the tip of the iceberg,” Saylor
“Capital faces dilution from taxes, regulation, competition, obsolescence, and unforeseen events. Bitcoin offers resilience in a world full of hidden risks,” he added.
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