On Sunday, March 22, Michael Saylor returned to X with his recognizable orange dot visualization, accompanied by the message “The Orange March Continues.” Market observers typically interpret such posts as indications that Strategy has completed — or is preparing to execute — another Bitcoin acquisition.
The visualization displayed Strategy’s aggregate Bitcoin holdings valued at $52.36 billion, representing 761,068 BTC accumulated starting in August 2020.
While the total appears substantial, current market conditions put the position underwater. Given an average acquisition price of $75,696 per Bitcoin and current trading levels around $68,100, Strategy faces an unrealized deficit exceeding 10%.
Bitcoin experienced a 4% decline to $67,725 on Sunday before staging a partial rebound. Analysts pointed to escalating military confrontations between the United States and Iran as one factor driving the weekend downturn.
Strategy’s March acquisitions have been substantial. The firm acquired 17,994 BTC on March 9, subsequently adding 22,337 BTC on March 16 — representing approximately $2.9 billion in Bitcoin purchases within a short timeframe.
MSTR declined 6.6% during the previous week, settling at $135.66. This pullback eliminated a significant portion of the double-digit gains the stock had recorded earlier during March.
Strategy Inc, MSTR
The equity has now retreated 68.7% from its record peak of $434.20. Between January 2023 and July 2025, it ranked among the strongest performers in American equity markets.
Current market capitalization stands at $46.8 billion, while enterprise value reaches $62.8 billion. This differential reflects the $8.25 billion debt burden present on Strategy’s financial statements.
Alongside this debt obligation, the company maintains $2.25 billion in cash reserves. Net leverage calculations indicate 11%.
Implied volatility for MSTR registers at 55%, while both 30-day and one-year historical volatility metrics show 74%. Open interest across MSTR derivatives totals $38.1 billion, indicating substantial speculative activity surrounding the shares.
Strategy had been leveraging high-yield perpetual preferred equity offerings to finance Bitcoin acquisitions while avoiding dilution of MSTR common shareholders. One such instrument, Stretch (STRC), provided monthly dividend payments to participants.
Last week, the company discontinued new capital raising through STRC following unsuccessful attempts to secure additional funding. This development creates questions regarding Strategy’s financing approach for future Bitcoin purchases.
MSTR trading volume hit $3.82 billion last week, significantly exceeding the 30-day average of $2.85 billion.
Notwithstanding the unrealized losses and financing complications, Saylor’s Sunday communication indicates the Bitcoin accumulation approach remains unchanged.
As of March 22, 2026, Strategy’s 761,068 BTC holdings constitute the world’s largest corporate Bitcoin reserve.
The post Strategy (MSTR) Stock Falls 7% as Saylor Signals Potential Bitcoin Acquisition appeared first on Blockonomi.


