The tech-turned-Bitcoin play Strategy (formerly MicroStrategy) has quietly scooped up another batch of BTC, its eleventh consecutive weekly buy, undeterred by the market’s slide below $100,000.
A filing released Monday shows the firm purchased 245 bitcoins for roughly $26 million, paying an average of just under $106,000 each.
That brings Strategy’s running tally to 592,345 BTC, accumulated since 2020 at an average cost of about $70,700—good for a paper gain near 20 % year-to-date. Though this latest buy is the smallest of 2025 (the previous low was 705 coins in May), it signals CEO Michael Saylor’s commitment to adding on every dip—geopolitical turmoil or not.
Investors, however, are less enthusiastic today: Strategy shares (ticker: MSTR) slipped about 2 % in pre-market trading, tracking Bitcoin’s own pullback. Even so, the stock remains up more than 25 % for 2025 and roughly 170 % over the past twelve months.
If the company places another order before Friday, it will match its previous streak of twelve straight weekly purchases set between last November and early February—further cementing its role as the world’s most voracious corporate Bitcoin holder.
Oslo-based seabed-mining firm Green Minerals is shifting its treasury reserves from kroner and dollars into bitcoin, calling the move a hedge against inflation and geopolitical risk.
Global crypto funds just logged a tenth straight week of fresh capital, pulling in another $1.24 billion even as prices slid and geopolitics turned tense.
Investor and entrepreneur Anthony Pompliano is rolling his private outfit, ProCap BTC LLC, into blank-check firm Columbus Circle Capital to form ProCap Financial, a new Nasdaq-listed business built around Bitcoin.
Personal-finance author Robert Kiyosaki is sounding the alarm that next year could bring an economic breakdown unlike anything modern markets have seen.