Two months ago, Michael Saylor's company was billions in the red.
Bitcoin ($BTC) had crashed from $126K to $60K during the Middle East war. Strategy's average cost was stuck well above the market. Every skeptic who wanted to call the top on $MSTR had an opening. This week, that window closed.
The Line Everyone Was Watching
Strategy's average cost per coin sits at $75,577. $BTC traded above that on April 14 and held it.
That's the moment the whole stack flipped from red to green on paper. First time in profit since early January. A three-month stretch in the hole that made Saylor's bet look, to the doubters, like it had finally caught up with him.
Think of it like a mortgage going from underwater to above water. Nothing changes about the house. Everything changes about how the bank sees you.
They Kept Buying The Whole Way Down
The more interesting part is what Strategy did during the crash.
Early April filings show the company added 13,927 BTC at an average of $71,902 per coin. That's roughly $1B more spent while the market was still shaky. Total holdings are now 780,897 BTC for about $59.02B.
JPMorgan flagged that Q1 crypto inflows were almost entirely Strategy. Everyone else went to cash. Saylor was the market.
The Target Is Still 1 Million
Strategy hasn't changed the plan. Goal is still 1 million BTC by the end of 2026. Nearly $49B left on the shopping list.
At today's prices, that's another 640,000 or so coins to buy in under nine months. The pace has been fast all year, and there's no sign of slowing.
For investors tracking $MSTR, this is the payoff stretch. The average cost is below market. The buy program is funded. And Bitcoin is setting up near a two-and-a-half-month high.
What To Watch
The test now is whether $BTC can hold above $75,577 if things get volatile again. Every coin Strategy bought in the dip is still in profit at $71,902. That cushion is what lets them keep buying without pressure to sell.
Saylor spent most of Q1 as the only buyer in the room. This week, the room started to agree with him.
