Between early February and late April, Strategy (MSTR +3.79%), formerly known as MicroStrategy, purchased 103,690 Bitcoin (BTC +2.25%), spending more than $7.5 billion in the process. Its holdings now stand at more than 818,000 bitcoins, or about 3.9% of Bitcoin’s 21 million-coin supply cap.
The pace of those purchases — totaling around 0.5% of the coin’s maximum possible supply — suggests that the company has a particular timeline in mind for its accumulation. For investors, the most relevant question is whether this purchasing is a structurally bullish force or if it’s introducing centralization, which could prove to be a risk later on.
Let’s dive in and try to get some clarity.
Image source: Getty Images.
This player is reshaping Bitcoin’s supply
Strategy’s haul of Bitcoin during the past three months is more than 2.5 times what the coin’s miners produced in the same period since only about 450 new coins enter circulation per day after the April 2024 halving.
The most interesting element of Strategy’s buying spree is its new class of shares, Stretch (STRC +0.09%), which is a perpetual preferred stock paying an 11.5% annual dividend yield, backed by Strategy’s holdings of Bitcoin and its ability to monetize them into a cash flow. Investors buy Stretch shares for their unusually high yield, and then Strategy routes the proceeds into Bitcoin purchases without the need to dilute its common shareholders, which has been one of the main ways it finances its coin purchases. In the first four months of 2026, Stretch funded about 77,000 of the coins Strategy acquired.

Today’s Change
(3.79%) $6.72
Current Price
$183.89
Key Data Points
Market Cap
$64B
Day’s Range
$178.52 – $186.00
52wk Range
$104.17 – $457.22
Volume
9.3K
Avg Vol
21M
Gross Margin
68.69%
Mining produces about 164,000 bitcoins annually. Strategy has been buying at a pace rivaling that output, and when Bitcoin exchange-traded fund (ETF) inflows are added, the competition over the asset’s available supply is hard to dismiss.
The most obvious consequence of Strategy’s shopping spree is, when paired with its new financing tool, that Bitcoin’s price will continue to experience a lot of buying pressure that forces up its price.

Today’s Change
(2.25%) $1782.53
Current Price
$80858.00
Key Data Points
Market Cap
$1.6T
Day’s Range
$78603.00 – $81136.00
52wk Range
$60255.56 – $126079.89
Volume
44B
This risk is likely to increase over time
Understanding what makes Bitcoin valuable starts with knowing about its scarcity, and given its hoard, Strategy’s accumulation does tighten the available supply substantially.
But it also concentrates a troubling amount of control onto a single company’s balance sheet. That contradicts one of the asset’s roots, where it sought to be neutral and widely dispersed so as to avoid any form of centralized influence. It also introduces a risk for the coin’s holders.

Today’s Change
(0.09%) $0.09
Current Price
$99.95
Key Data Points
Day’s Range
$99.89 – $99.95
52wk Range
$88.00 – $100.42
Volume
47K
Avg Vol
2.6M
A sustained price decline in Bitcoin could ultimately push down the value of Strategy’s stock, which could in turn trigger a cascade of forced selling of the coin. Stretch’s $1.2 billion in annual dividend obligations make this problem a bit bigger; Strategy holds a cash reserve for roughly 30 months of payments, but that buffer would erode quickly if the market conditions were not permissive for it to issue new shares to raise more capital. So, in a worst-case scenario, Strategy’s financial engineering, plus its hefty holdings, could make a future painful Bitcoin downturn vastly worse.
But even that wouldn’t detract from Bitcoin’s long-term scarcity thesis. Therefore, if Strategy ever becomes a forced seller of Bitcoin, the resulting dip could be a great buying opportunity if you can stomach it.
Until then, size your position with the understanding that the same force making Bitcoin scarcer and driving its price up is also making it more fragile, and invest only what you can afford to hold through the turbulence.

