expensive" when it comes to Bitcoin.
Early this Thursday morning, Saylor took to X to hint at even more acquisitions, just days after the company dropped $2.13 billion to expand its already massive digital reserve.
The Massive Mid-January "Buy"
Following a capital-raising spree between January 12 and 19, the company officially disclosed its latest haul on January 20.
• Bitcoin Added: 22,305 BTC
• Total Cost: $2.13 Billion
• Average Price: $95,284 per BTC (inclusive of all fees)
• Funding Source: Strategic sales of common stock and a new "Series A Perpetual Stretch Preferred Stock" (STRC).
This acquisition brings the company’s total war chest to 709,715 BTC, worth approximately $53.92 billion at the time of the announcement. With an aggregate average cost of $75,979, the company remains comfortably in the green, despite the current market turbulence.
Market Volatility: The "Greenland Shock"
The timing of the purchase coincided with a week of extreme geopolitical drama. On January 20, 2026, global markets were rattled by President Trump’s threat to impose 25% tariffs on several European nations unless Denmark agrees to sell Greenland to the United States.
The resulting "risk-off" sentiment had a clear impact:
• Bitcoin’s Reaction: The price dipped into the low-$90K zone, with intraday flash crashes reaching $87,000.
• The Safe Haven Pivot: Gold surged to new record highs as investors fled traditional equity and crypto risk.
• Current Standing: As of Thursday, January 22, Bitcoin is consolidating around $88,800, struggling to regain the momentum that took it to its $126,000 all-time high in October 2025.
Saylor's Unshakable Conviction
While critics point to the company’s heavy reliance on debt and share dilution—and the fact that Bitcoin is currently trading below its most recent purchase price—Saylor’s philosophy remains unchanged. He views Bitcoin as a long-term treasury reserve asset, not a speculative trade.
By buying during this consolidation phase, Strategy Inc. is betting that the current dip below $100,000 is a temporary roadblock on the path to much higher valuations, regardless of whether the map includes Greenland or not.
