Futures
Access hundreds of perpetual contracts
CFD
Gold
One platform for global traditional assets
Options
Hot
Trade European-style vanilla options
Unified Account
Maximize your capital efficiency
Demo Trading
Introduction to Futures Trading
Learn the basics of futures trading
Futures Events
Join events to earn rewards
Demo Trading
Use virtual funds to practice risk-free trading
Launch
CandyDrop
Collect candies to earn airdrops
Launchpool
Quick staking, earn potential new tokens
HODLer Airdrop
Hold GT and get massive airdrops for free
Pre-IPOs
Unlock full access to global stock IPOs
Alpha Points
Trade on-chain assets and earn airdrops
Futures Points
Earn futures points and claim airdrop rewards
Promotions
AI
Gate AI
Your all-in-one conversational AI partner
Gate AI Bot
Use Gate AI directly in your social App
GateClaw
Gate Blue Lobster, ready to go
Gate for AI Agent
AI infrastructure, Gate MCP, Skills, and CLI
Gate Skills Hub
10K+ Skills
From office tasks to trading, the all-in-one skill hub makes AI even more useful.
GateRouter
Smartly choose from 40+ AI models, with 0% extra fees
#SaylorHintsAtMoreBTC
SAYLOR HINTS AT MORE BTC THE SIGNAL, THE STACK, AND THE STRATEGY BEHIND THE WORLD'S LARGEST BITCOIN TREASURY
On May 31, 2026, Michael Saylor posted "Working ₿etter" on X two words that immediately sent the crypto community into speculation mode. For anyone who has followed Strategy's journey, this is not random chatter. It is a signal. Every time Saylor drops a cryptic Bitcoin-themed post, an 8-K filing follows within days confirming a fresh acquisition. This time, the stakes are higher than ever.
Strategy currently holds 843,738 BTC the largest corporate Bitcoin treasury on Earth, acquired at a blended cost basis of approximately $75,700 per coin. With Bitcoin hovering near $76,800 as of late May, the entire position sits just marginally above breakeven. That near-flat status masks an extraordinary story: Strategy has accumulated roughly 4% of all Bitcoin that will ever exist, transforming a mid-sized enterprise software company into what many now call the ultimate Bitcoin proxy.
The accumulation flywheel is unlike anything else in corporate finance. Strategy raises capital through STRC perpetual preferred stock, convertible notes, and equity offerings, then deploys virtually all of it into Bitcoin. On May 26, Saylor announced the company had completed the repurchase of $1.5 billion of its 2029 Convertible Notes at an approximately 8% discount a move that generated an incremental 0.7% BTC Yield, reduced aggregate debt to $6.7 billion, and strengthened the capital structure for future buys. STRC preferred share volume hit an all-time record of 15.1 million shares on a single trading day in May, demonstrating that investor appetite for funding Strategy's Bitcoin mission remains robust.
Independent tracker estimates suggest that roughly 15,466 BTC were funneled into Strategy purchases across four active trading days in a recent week one of the firm's biggest weekly accumulation runs of 2026. Year-to-date, Strategy's BTC Yield stands at 13.3%, meaning each share of MSTR now economically represents more Bitcoin than it did on January 1. The company has bought 2.5 times more Bitcoin in 2026 than all miners collectively produced, cementing its role as the dominant demand-side force in the market.
But the picture is not without tension. Strategy has not added to its holdings since May 18, marking the longest gap in its recent weekly buying streak. Arca CIO Jeff Dorman published a direct warning about the capital flywheel's structural strain: approximately $15 billion in outstanding preferred stock and roughly $1.5 billion in annual dividend obligations now place real pressure on the accumulation model. A pivotal proxy vote on STRC dividend structure closes on June 7, and its outcome will determine whether Strategy can continue financing Bitcoin purchases through preferred share issuance without shareholder friction.
MSTR stock is up 6.8% year-to-date while Bitcoin itself is down approximately 12.5% a divergence that shows investors are valuing two separate components: the common stock's exposure to Bitcoin plus capital markets execution, and the preferreds' claim on dividend confidence and the durability of the funding channel. Some community voices note a recent 411 BTC transfer to an exchange that was subsequently reversed, suggesting Strategy may be testing operational capabilities for potential sales even if the stated philosophy remains "never sell." Any sales, however, would reportedly be followed by "exponentially more" buys.
Meanwhile, the broader institutional landscape presents mixed signals. U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs now collectively hold approximately 1.3 million BTC, but seven consecutive days of outflows and a Coinbase premium index hitting its lowest level since February suggest institutional demand is cooling. Bitcoin remains under pressure near $75,000, with geopolitical uncertainty and macro headwinds testing conviction across the market.
Yet Saylor's message remains unchanged. "Working ₿etter" is not just a tease for the next purchase it is a declaration that the flywheel is being refined, not abandoned. Whether the next 8-K reveals a modest or massive acquisition, the broader thesis is clear: Strategy treats Bitcoin as its savings account, and it keeps figuring out how to top it up using capital markets innovation.
For observers tracking the signal, the question is not whether Saylor buys more Bitcoin. The question is how much and what the capital structure reveals about sustainability.
#MichaelSaylor #BTC
SAYLOR HINTS AT MORE BTC THE SIGNAL, THE STACK, AND THE STRATEGY BEHIND THE WORLD'S LARGEST BITCOIN TREASURY
On May 31, 2026, Michael Saylor posted "Working ₿etter" on X two words that immediately sent the crypto community into speculation mode. For anyone who has followed Strategy's journey, this is not random chatter. It is a signal. Every time Saylor drops a cryptic Bitcoin-themed post, an 8-K filing follows within days confirming a fresh acquisition. This time, the stakes are higher than ever.
Strategy currently holds 843,738 BTC the largest corporate Bitcoin treasury on Earth, acquired at a blended cost basis of approximately $75,700 per coin. With Bitcoin hovering near $76,800 as of late May, the entire position sits just marginally above breakeven. That near-flat status masks an extraordinary story: Strategy has accumulated roughly 4% of all Bitcoin that will ever exist, transforming a mid-sized enterprise software company into what many now call the ultimate Bitcoin proxy.
The accumulation flywheel is unlike anything else in corporate finance. Strategy raises capital through STRC perpetual preferred stock, convertible notes, and equity offerings, then deploys virtually all of it into Bitcoin. On May 26, Saylor announced the company had completed the repurchase of $1.5 billion of its 2029 Convertible Notes at an approximately 8% discount a move that generated an incremental 0.7% BTC Yield, reduced aggregate debt to $6.7 billion, and strengthened the capital structure for future buys. STRC preferred share volume hit an all-time record of 15.1 million shares on a single trading day in May, demonstrating that investor appetite for funding Strategy's Bitcoin mission remains robust.
Independent tracker estimates suggest that roughly 15,466 BTC were funneled into Strategy purchases across four active trading days in a recent week one of the firm's biggest weekly accumulation runs of 2026. Year-to-date, Strategy's BTC Yield stands at 13.3%, meaning each share of MSTR now economically represents more Bitcoin than it did on January 1. The company has bought 2.5 times more Bitcoin in 2026 than all miners collectively produced, cementing its role as the dominant demand-side force in the market.
But the picture is not without tension. Strategy has not added to its holdings since May 18, marking the longest gap in its recent weekly buying streak. Arca CIO Jeff Dorman published a direct warning about the capital flywheel's structural strain: approximately $15 billion in outstanding preferred stock and roughly $1.5 billion in annual dividend obligations now place real pressure on the accumulation model. A pivotal proxy vote on STRC dividend structure closes on June 7, and its outcome will determine whether Strategy can continue financing Bitcoin purchases through preferred share issuance without shareholder friction.
MSTR stock is up 6.8% year-to-date while Bitcoin itself is down approximately 12.5% a divergence that shows investors are valuing two separate components: the common stock's exposure to Bitcoin plus capital markets execution, and the preferreds' claim on dividend confidence and the durability of the funding channel. Some community voices note a recent 411 BTC transfer to an exchange that was subsequently reversed, suggesting Strategy may be testing operational capabilities for potential sales even if the stated philosophy remains "never sell." Any sales, however, would reportedly be followed by "exponentially more" buys.
Meanwhile, the broader institutional landscape presents mixed signals. U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs now collectively hold approximately 1.3 million BTC, but seven consecutive days of outflows and a Coinbase premium index hitting its lowest level since February suggest institutional demand is cooling. Bitcoin remains under pressure near $75,000, with geopolitical uncertainty and macro headwinds testing conviction across the market.
Yet Saylor's message remains unchanged. "Working ₿etter" is not just a tease for the next purchase it is a declaration that the flywheel is being refined, not abandoned. Whether the next 8-K reveals a modest or massive acquisition, the broader thesis is clear: Strategy treats Bitcoin as its savings account, and it keeps figuring out how to top it up using capital markets innovation.
For observers tracking the signal, the question is not whether Saylor buys more Bitcoin. The question is how much and what the capital structure reveals about sustainability.
#MichaelSaylor #BTC