MicroStrategy defends its balance sheet once again.
Strategy bought more Bitcoin, but MSTR stock still looks weak. Charts show bearish divergence and a 40% breakdown risk ahead.
MicroStrategy’s $49.4B Bitcoin covers $8.2B debt, with cash reserves funding dividends and no major repayments until 2028.
Strategy claims it can cover $6 billion debt if Bitcoin falls to $8,000, but leverage and liquidity risks escalate below that level.
Strategy, formerly MicroStrategy, kept buying Bitcoin, picking up 2,486 BTC for $168.4 million between 916, 2026. They paid an average of $67,710 per coin. This was the fourth-biggest buy of the year, ...
Michael Saylor’s Strategy Inc. bought nearly $170 million in Bitcoin, roughly half of which was financed with perpetual ...
On February 10, 2026, Michael Saylor, the Executive Chairman of MicroStrategy (now commonly referred to as "Strategy"), issued a defiant defense of the ...
Saylor cites regulatory support and banking adoption as key Bitcoin catalysts during MicroStrategy's Q4 2025 earnings ...
Strategy, formerly MicroStrategy, has claimed that the company can fully cover its $6 billion debt even if BTC falls 88% to ...
Michael Saylor's Bitcoin (BTC) treasury company, Strategy (Nasdaq: MSTR), earlier known as MicroStrategy, has been successful in retaining its spot in the Nasdaq 100 (NDQ). A benchmark stock market ...
MicroStrategy Inc's (NASDAQ: MSTR) stock doesn't trade like a software company anymore — and Jan. 15 could force Wall Street to formally admit it. The company has effectively reinvented itself as a ...