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8BitcoinProgressed· since 2026-06-12Jun 15, 2026

Strategy Adds 1,587 BTC for $100M; Total Holdings Reach 846,842 BTC

Strategy (formerly MicroStrategy) purchased an additional 1,587 Bitcoin for approximately $100 million at an average price of $63,024, bringing its total Bitcoin holdings to 846,842 BTC. Michael Saylor had previously signaled a fresh acquisition was imminent.

Strategy completed a fresh $100M purchase of 1,587 BTC at an average price of $63,024, bringing total holdings to 846,842 BTC.

Strategy: funding both sides from the same tap

Strategy bought another 1,587 BTC last week — but the more revealing detail is how it paid for everything at once. In the same week, it raised $209 million by issuing new shares, used half to buy bitcoin and used the proceeds to also top up a $1.1 billion cash reserve it set aside specifically to service preferred dividends and debt.

It's a single equity tap funding two obligations simultaneously: accumulate bitcoin, and stay current on the financial engineering that funds the accumulation.

At 846,842 BTC — roughly 4% of all bitcoin that will ever exist — Strategy isn't a company that holds bitcoin anymore. It's a vehicle whose entire financial structure depends on being able to keep issuing shares at a price that justifies buying more. That works beautifully in a rising market. It's a much more interesting question when it doesn't.

Story timeline · 5 days

  1. Jun 16, 20268
    Strategy and Marathon Add $166M in Bitcoin; Strive Raises Capital for BTC Accumulation

    Strategy's $100M purchase confirmed with additional detail on shareholder dilution; Marathon separately added $66M BTC; Strive raised preferred stock capital to buy 111 BTC.

  2. Jun 15, 20268· this story
    Strategy Adds 1,587 BTC for $100M; Total Holdings Reach 846,842 BTC

    Strategy completed a fresh $100M purchase of 1,587 BTC at an average price of $63,024, bringing total holdings to 846,842 BTC.

  3. Jun 14, 20267
    Strategy CEO Reveals Conditions for Forced Bitcoin Selling; Saylor Defends BTC Sales as Digital Credit

    Strategy CEO publicly outlined specific conditions under which BTC holdings could be sold; Saylor separately defended prior BTC sales as part of digital credit business mechanics.

  4. Jun 12, 20266
    MicroStrategy Debt Strategy Under Pressure as Bitcoin Drops; Nakamoto Cuts BTC to Reduce Debt

    MicroStrategy's debt strategy is now reported as under active pressure following Bitcoin's price decline, and Nakamoto separately cut $45M in debt by selling BTC, extending corporate BTC treasury stress signals.

  5. Jun 11, 20266
    Strategy CEO Frames Bitcoin Sale as Market 'Inoculation' Test

Opinion timeline

Takes over time· 2 takes
  1. Mon, Jun 15First Take· 7

    Strategy: funding both sides from the same tap

    Strategy Adds 1,587 BTC for $100M; Total Holdings Reach 846,842 BTC

    Strategy bought another 1,587 BTC last week — but the more revealing detail is how it paid for everything at once. In the same week, it raised $209 million by issuing new shares, used half to buy bitcoin and used the proceeds to also top up a $1.1 billion cash reserve it set aside specifically to service preferred dividends and debt.

    It's a single equity tap funding two obligations simultaneously: accumulate bitcoin, and stay current on the financial engineering that funds the accumulation.

    At 846,842 BTC — roughly 4% of all bitcoin that will ever exist — Strategy isn't a company that holds bitcoin anymore. It's a vehicle whose entire financial structure depends on being able to keep issuing shares at a price that justifies buying more. That works beautifully in a rising market. It's a much more interesting question when it doesn't.

    Full summary & sources →
  2. Tue, Jun 16First Take· 7

    Strategy: the metric that tells on itself

    Strategy and Marathon Add $166M in Bitcoin; Strive Raises Capital for BTC Accumulation

    BTC Yield — Strategy's own measure of how much Bitcoin each share represents — fell three times in a row while the Bitcoin stack grew. That's the tell.

    Saylor's counter is that BTC Yield ignores the $1.1 billion cash reserve sitting behind common equity, and that the full picture is more favourable than the per-share number suggests. That's a legitimate point. But it's also a company asking you to stop using the simple metric and trust a more complex one — right at the moment the simple metric started moving against shareholders.

    At 846,842 BTC, Strategy can probably absorb a shrinking ratio for a while. The question is whether the story works when the number that was supposed to prove it keeps going the wrong way.

    Full summary & sources →

Sources · 3