In 2020, Michael Saylor faced a problem that changed the course of his company—and the crypto market.
As governments responded to the COVID-19 crisis with lockdowns and money printing, the MicroStrategy founder saw something deeper than a public health emergency: a full-blown assault on the value of money itself.
With interest rates near zero and inflation quietly accelerating, Saylor watched his company’s $500 million cash reserve slowly become worthless. Traditional investments felt overvalued. Real estate was inflated, stocks were soaring, and safe assets yielded nothing. Even the art market didn’t offer a realistic hedge. He needed something liquid, borderless, and immune to political control.
That’s when he began questioning everything he knew about finance. Bitcoin, once dismissed as a speculative fad, suddenly seemed like a lifeline. After digging into its fundamentals through podcasts, books, and conversations with crypto insiders, Saylor came to see it as the digital equivalent of gold—only faster, easier to store, and uncorrelated with government policy.
His conclusion was clear: sitting on dollars meant watching years of corporate effort erode. In August 2020, MicroStrategy made its first Bitcoin purchase—21,454 BTC for $250 million. What started as a defensive move became a long-term strategy. The firm now holds over 582,000 BTC, worth more than $60 billion, making it the largest corporate holder of Bitcoin to date.
For Saylor, the decision wasn’t driven by hype, but by a belief that in a world of economic instability, a decentralized asset offered the most resilient store of value.
Bitcoin is treading water near the $120,000 resistance, with persistent bids around $116,000 offering a firm base—but failing to ignite fresh upside momentum.
Michael Saylor, executive chairman of Strategy, has revealed that the company has acquired an additional 21,021 Bitcoin for approximately $2.46 billion, paying an average price of $117,256 per BTC.
As Bitcoin continues to consolidate above $100K, a critical market signal is flashing: BTC funding rates remain elevated, even as price action cools.
Billionaire investor Ray Dalio, founder of Bridgewater Associates, has suggested that a balanced investment portfolio should include up to 15% allocation to gold or Bitcoin, though he remains personally more inclined toward the traditional asset.