- 13,927 BTC acquired for approximately $1.00 billion
- Average purchase price: $71,902 per BTC
- Total holdings: 780,897 BTC
- Aggregate investment: $59.02 billion
- Overall average price: $75,577 per BTC
- BTC Yield: 5.6% YTD 2026
- Holdings recorded as of: April 12, 2026
Strategy Expands Bitcoin Holdings
Strategy reported the acquisition of 13,927 Bitcoin (BTC) for approximately $1.00 billion. The purchase was made at an average price of $71,902 per bitcoin. This latest acquisition increases the company’s total Bitcoin holdings to 780,897 BTC.

Latest Bitcoin Purchase Details: Strategy Inc. (Nasdaq: MSTR), formerly known as MicroStrategy, has announced the acquisition of an additional 13,927 BTC for approximately $1.00 billion, at an average price of $75,577 per BTC, according to a regulatory filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. The purchase was disclosed in a Form 8-K filing and reflects the company’s continued commitment to Bitcoin as its primary treasury reserve asset.
Total Investment and Average Cost: Strategy’s aggregate Bitcoin investment now stands at approximately $59.02 billion, with an overall average purchase price of $75,577 per BTC. The figures reflect cumulative acquisition activity up to April 12, 2026.
BTC Yield Performance: Strategy reported a Bitcoin yield of 5.6% year-to-date (YTD) for 2026.
This latest acquisition reinforces Strategy’s aggressive accumulation model, which has seen consistent large-scale Bitcoin purchases throughout 2026, including multiple billion-dollar buys in recent months. The company continues to leverage capital markets primarily equity and preferred stock offerings to finance these acquisitions, signaling strong institutional conviction despite Bitcoin’s price volatility.
With holdings now approaching 4% of Bitcoin’s total supply, Strategy remains by far the largest corporate holder, further solidifying its position as a proxy for Bitcoin exposure in traditional equity markets. This sustained accumulation strategy underscores a long-term thesis centered on Bitcoin as “digital capital,” rather than a short-term speculative asset.







