Michael Saylor’s Bitcoin accumulation machine is still running at full speed - even as the market dips.
In a new update shared on social media, Saylor revealed that Strategy has added 8,178 $BTC to its treasury, spending roughly $835.6 million at an average price of $102,171 per bitcoin.
The buy pushes the firm’s total holdings to an extraordinary 649,870 $BTC, acquired at an average cost of about $74,433 per coin. Strategy’s year-to-date bitcoin yield now sits at 27.8%, even after the latest market pullback.
The scale of the purchase leaves little doubt: Saylor continues to view major dips as opportunities rather than threats.
Bitcoin Drops as Saylor Buys
The aggressive accumulation comes at a moment when the crypto market is under renewed pressure. At the time of writing, Bitcoin is trading around $93,910, down more than 1.5% over the last 24 hours, and 11.5% on the week.

The leading crypto has shed momentum in November, with its price trending downward after a series of macro-driven sell-offs, ETF outflows, and government-shutdown turbulence. Despite the weakness, Saylor appears unfazed – continuing to buy into the volatility as $BTC tests the mid-$90K range.
Strategy’s Giant Stack Nears 650K $BTC
With the latest purchase, Strategy’s holdings are approaching an unprecedented 650,000 $BTC, a number rivaling the reserves of some early crypto exchanges and even nation-state treasuries. The firm remains the single largest corporate holder of bitcoin globally.
Saylor emphasized the long-term thesis: accumulating as much $BTC as possible while supply tightens and institutional demand accelerates.
readmore id=”180273″]
Market Eyes $BTC’s Next Move
Bitcoin’s struggle to hold support near $94K has traders cautious, but Saylor’s continued buying highlights a growing divide between long-term conviction and short-term sentiment.
If $BTC rebounds, Strategy’s massive position could become even more dominant. If the downturn continues, the company appears ready to keep stacking.
For now, the message from Saylor is clear: dips are not dangers — they’re invitations.