Michael Saylor’s fancy habit of hittin’ Bitcoin just as it’s leapin’ up and down is less ‘I’m a bad trader’ and more a funny thing about how a big company makes money, says Dylan LeClair, the big dun net at Metaplanet, pitch‑in’ a textbook lesson on Treasury style.
Why Saylor Keeps Buying The Bitcoin Top
LeClair tells us the sniping of critics-yours truly, who love a good catchphrase-doesn’t get the engineering right. “The Bitcoin treasury model is very pro‑cic‑like,” he says. “When the world’s a good buyer’s market, it feels easier to raise money. Then Bitcoin is strong, the ticker swings merry and folks the claws are open.”
When the market’s thirsty, you can wring a headline out of town. That explains why Strategy’s bulk buys pop up when Bitcoin’s already jump‑wooing strong. If the company’s stock is dancing while the dollar is crisp, it’s a pipeline of money to pump into BTC. “Once we unwrap the stock, we deal minute‑by‑minute,” LeClair says, alluding to Saylor’s own word‑smith record of how quick the scoops can be. “Ask anyone who hears a monthly purchase and they’ll balk at what’s named a “high.” The market says, actually, we did the other way round.”
In his telling, Strategy is not shaking a ‘I’d rather buy more if the market asks for a bite’ hand. It stores the decision for when the bank line is wide open. That detail matters more than many a councilman’s fight song, especially for public forstrated Bitcoin Treasury firms whose cap‑raising power depends on mood, stock multiples, and liquidity. It ain’t a trick, it’s a truth.
The model’s changing. Where Strategy once held the high‑stakes on common stock and – at times – lures with a convertible bond, LeClair eye the crack’n‑crack of preferred equity, the STRC, as a new bug‑trap. “It lets the company keep the pens inclined even when Bitcoin’s brushier than a poop in a coal‑drift canyon.”
“STRC is the one that lets you pull a pocket change out of a piggy‑bank regardless of the weather,” he says. “Whether Bitcoin is a fable or a Pharisee, if STRC is at 100, we can rustle a heap of coins. We raised $1.2 billion in one yank without bulging our MSTR ledger.”
LeClair dubs that more than a tweak; he swears it’s a new bridge between BTC swagger and pools of money that can’t even vouch for a spot BTC. “There’s a trillion of white‑coats who want low volatility, high yield,” he comments. “So Saylor puts together a terrain that would make a Mason grin.”
That capital‑market angle ran through most of the interview. Metaplanet’s thesis has barely budged despite the dip, but the tactics have changed. In a buoyant market, chief sellers lean on common stock. In a weathered summer, other waivers help keep the gear turning. “We changed a bit how our deck spins,” he says.
LeClair suggests Strategy now takes the place of the marginal buyer of Bitcoin, which is a stranglehold, trusting a tale that the ETF dustgathering doesn’t catch up to the fresh coming. But Saylor runs out of space, hauling the new securities like a Ventura sled and shrinking the aged convertibles down the stack. A bargain weapons‑ramp for BTC, indeed.
At the scribble of the story, BTC was playing at $67,639.

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2026-03-30 14:42