Investors piled back into Microstrategy stock as bitcoin rebounded and Federal Reserve rate-cut expectations improved, sparking renewed interest in the firm’s leveraged crypto strategy.
Strategy (formerly MicroStrategy) shares closed at $188.99 on December 9, 2025, up 2.9% after touching an intraday high of $197.98. The move followed the company’s disclosure of a $962.7 million bitcoin purchase and came amid a broader cryptocurrency market recovery.
According to a Strategy SEC filing, the firm bought 10,624 BTC between December 1 and December 7 for approximately $962.7 million, paying an average of $90,615 per coin. This significant accumulation reinforced the company’s long-standing positioning as a leveraged proxy on bitcoin’s price.
The acquisition lifted Strategy bitcoin holdings to a total of 660,624 BTC, cementing its status as the largest corporate holder of the asset. Moreover, such large-scale purchases have historically acted as confidence signals during bitcoin rallies, often coinciding with upside moves in MSTR stock.
The latest buying spree came as bitcoin rebounded toward $95,000, supported by renewed risk appetite and improving macro conditions ahead of the Federal Reserve‘s December policy meeting. Markets increasingly expected federal reserve cuts in the coming months, easing worries around tight financial conditions for risk assets.
Institutional flows also underpinned sentiment. On December 9, PNC Bank, the eighth-largest US commercial bank, launched direct spot bitcoin trading for eligible clients, using Coinbase‘s Crypto-as-a-Service infrastructure. This milestone in bitcoin institutional adoption helped lift confidence across digital asset markets and spilled over into Strategy’s shares.
On-chain dynamics added further fuel to the move. As bitcoin pushed through the $89,000 to $92,000 range, leveraged short positions were flushed out, triggering hundreds of millions in reported liquidations. That cascade contributed to a swift push toward $94,000, aligning with the day’s rebound in Strategy stock.
Despite the day’s rally, traders characterized the recent microstrategy stock chart as still consolidating following a sharp correction from 2025’s highs. However, several analysts highlighted the potential for a renewed squeeze if market conditions continue to favor bitcoin.
On December 9, trader Stock Pattern Pros said Strategy appeared primed for a “long overdue squeeze,” citing technical indicators that pointed to scope for continued upside. The stock had pushed above recent trading ranges, with rising volume accompanying the bitcoin purchase news.
That said, a prior caution from trader Trader XO remained in focus. XO had warned that the stock’s advance topped out around $455, flagging resistance in the $425 to $455 area. In this zone, the share price reached a local peak before consolidating below those levels through mid-2025.
XO revisited his view on December 1, updating his chart with the caption “it is what it is” and noting that the price never revisited the $455 region after the May peak. His updated analysis showed Strategy shares sliding to $157.53 after breaking below key support near $325.
The drop from the May high represented a fall of more than 60%, contributing to a year-to-date loss of roughly 35% to 40%. Moreover, the December 9 move to $188.99 merely marked a modest rebound, leaving the stock still trading about 58% below its May peak.
This backdrop led many chart-watchers to argue that microstrategy stock remained in a consolidation phase, attempting to build a base after a violent correction. For directional traders, that pattern suggested a period of range-bound price action before any sustained trend higher or lower.
Beyond short-term price swings, some analysts focused on valuation and structure. Trader defivillain outlined the long-term rationale behind Strategy’s approach, stressing that the company is engineered to maximize bitcoin-per-share through aggressive capital allocation.
In this framework, the company’s equity effectively acts as a leveraged vehicle on bitcoin, designed to outperform the underlying asset over extended periods when the strategy is executed as planned. However, defivillain noted that over shorter horizons, bitcoin itself can outperform Strategy, particularly when the stock trades at rich multiples relative to its net asset value in bitcoin terms.
When the shares commanded a multiple of around three times bitcoin’s net asset value, as seen in November 2024, the downside versus holding bitcoin directly became substantial. The subsequent 2025 sell-off therefore reflected a year of multiple-to-NAV compression from those elevated valuation levels.
However, defivillain argued that as the multiple compresses toward one times net asset value, investors should grow more constructive rather than turn bearish. At that point, the relative downside in bitcoin terms is much smaller compared with valuations at two or three times NAV, while the structural upside from bitcoin-per-share accretion remains.
From this perspective, recent pricing may offer an appealing entry zone for long-term bulls on bitcoin who prefer equity exposure. While short-term volatility in Strategy remains significant, the compressed multiple could limit relative downside while preserving the company’s role as a high-beta proxy on the leading cryptocurrency.
In summary, Strategy’s latest billion-dollar bitcoin purchase is improving macro signals and rising institutional participation have combined to reignite interest in the stock. Yet the technical backdrop still reflects consolidation after a deep 2025 drawdown, leaving investors to weigh near-term risks against the longer-term structural leverage to bitcoin’s trajectory.


