Saylor: Bitcoin Sale 'Not Unlikely' by 2026
Michael Saylor isn't ruling out a Bitcoin sale by 2026. The MicroStrategy CEO sees it as a move to optimize company performance.
Michael Saylor isn't ruling out a Bitcoin sale by 2026. The MicroStrategy CEO sees it as a move to optimize company performance.
TD Cowen sees a massive upside for MicroStrategy, pushing its price target to $400 per share. The firm's aggressive Bitcoin buying strategy is paying off, according to analysts.
Michael Saylor's latest pronouncements signal a potential MicroStrategy Bitcoin acquisition, even as the company aggressively courts retail investors for a vital vote on its preferred stock dividends.
MicroStrategy's Michael Saylor is once again signaling Bitcoin accumulation. However, a recent earnings call introduced a potential wrinkle: the possibility of selling.
Strategy, the company that's basically become a Bitcoin ETF in disguise, is hitting the brakes on its crypto buying spree. The pause comes just before its Q1 earnings report, and frankly, it smells like caution.
Last week, Michael Saylor's Strategy dropped $1 billion on 13,927 bitcoin — all funded by peddling preferred stock called Stretch. But here's the rub: shares dipped anyway, hinting at deeper cracks in this bitcoin treasury obsession.
Ceasefire whispers sent Bitcoin soaring Monday—then reality bit back hard. While whales like Saylor keep stacking sats, is this just another geo-political pump-and-dump?
Bitcoin corporate treasuries are no longer marching in lockstep. As BTC slips below $70K, some companies are dumping holdings at a loss while others double down—and the cracks are starting to show.