Strategy currently holds 843,738 BTC valued at around $65 billion, making it one of the largest corporate holders of the cryptocurrency in the world. The company paid roughly $63 billion to acquire that stash, leaving it sitting on about $1.50 billion in unrealized profit.
None of that stopped Michael Saylor from announcing something that caught the crypto market off guard this week. The executive chairman confirmed on X that Strategy bought bonds this week instead of adding to its Bitcoin pile, writing that “the BitVac is charging” — a phrase suggesting the pause is temporary and the buying machine is being readied again.
The move comes as Strategy works through a plan to repurchase close to $1.5 billion in face value of its 0% convertible senior notes due 2029. Reports indicate the company expects to pay around $1.38 billion in cash, drawing on existing reserves, stock sales through its at-the-market program, and potentially some Bitcoin sales to cover the cost.
This week we bought bonds, not bitcoin. The ₿itVac is charging. pic.twitter.com/yUpVNiNTPT
— Michael Saylor (@saylor) May 24, 2026
Retiring that debt at a discount has a direct effect on shareholders. Fewer convertible notes outstanding means less potential dilution from future share conversions, which in turn raises the amount of Bitcoin represented by each share of MSTR stock.
Strategy’s last big Bitcoin acquisition saw it pick up 24,869 BTC for roughly $2 billion, funded through sales of its STRC perpetual preferred shares and MSTR stock. Based on reports, no Bitcoin was sold to fund this week’s bond purchases, leaving the company’s BTC holdings intact.
MSTR Stock Under Pressure
The announcement did little to calm investors already rattled by recent selling from inside the company. MSTR stock finished Friday down 3% at $159.89 and has fallen more than 5% over the past week, with reports pointing to share sales by CFO Andrew Kang and director Jarrod Patten as part of the pressure on the stock.
Saylor has long described his approach as “Bitcoin forever,” and Strategy has raised billions through various financial instruments to keep buying. By pulling back on fresh purchases this week to clean up its debt picture, Strategy appears to be preparing its balance sheet for the next round of accumulation rather than stepping away from the trade.
Featured image from Unsplash, chart from TradingView
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