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Saylor's STRC Flywheel Is Spinning: BTC Buying Enters Self-Reinforcing Cycle
Saylor’s BTC Buying Machine Reaches a Critical Point
Yesterday, traders flocked to discuss STRC because Michael Saylor’s “leveraged buying” mechanism has entered a self-reinforcing phase. A previously relatively quiet preferred stock suddenly became a hot topic across the internet. What was originally a routine ATM issuance was amplified into a viral narrative claiming “Strategy’s holdings will surpass BlackRock,” with sites like STRC.live tracking real-time data becoming the default for market monitoring.
This is no coincidence—post-halving liquidity is tight, and funds wanting exposure to BTC without the hassle of custody are precisely looking for such an outlet. The surge in discussion volume is fundamentally driven by transaction and subscription data confirming the “flywheel” logic, combined with influencer dissemination and greed-driven extrapolation of daily purchase volumes. But why is the peak concentrated around mid-March 2026?
Setting aside the noise that “STRC = risk-free return”—which is a perspective focused only on coupon yield without considering dilution and fragile face value—the core story is: STRC’s real appeal lies in amplifying BTC upside using Saylor’s “ammunition stockpile.” Yesterday’s focus also returned to the hard metric of “net position increase.”
Yield Flywheel and Viral “Arithmetic”
What are the main drivers? ATM supply and trading volume exploded, pushing daily BTC purchases into the “thousand-coin” range, transforming STRC into a near-infinite converter of “fiat to BTC.” Once this is visualized on Twitter—estimating over 4,000 BTC bought in a single day—FOMO among off-chain funds is triggered.
Timing-wise, after geopolitical events in Iran, BTC formed a “sticky floor” above $70,000, providing a buying opportunity. STRC’s approximately 11.5% dividend became an entry point for institutions (like Strive), bringing in new capital. The narrative is straightforward: Saylor funds spot purchases with preferred stock financing, even surpassing ETF net inflows in the short term. Yesterday’s data pushed this “arithmetic” to an undeniable threshold, repeatedly packaged on platforms like X as “Saylor’s Bitcoin buying machine.”
However, the hype is uneven—some drivers align with on-chain and capital flow data, allowing for “retention”; others are more about self-reinforcing hype.
The table outlines the ignition chain—note that data from dashboards like STRC.live most effectively “stick,” and the price-flow-accumulation reflexivity is strongest in the “arithmetic narrative.”
Strategically, I lean toward long spot BTC, betting on Saylor’s accumulated positions forming a price floor, but I will downplay exuberant extrapolations like “5,700 BTC in a single day”—any yield reduction could quickly bring it back to reality.
Conclusion: This “flywheel” resembles early accumulation signals, with sticky capital shifts; but skepticism is warranted toward viral “arithmetic” in the short term—true momentum comes from verifiable capital flows, not chain reposts. For readers, this remains a “pre-early” stage, with advantages for traders and hedge funds capable of flexible position adjustments, prioritizing MSTR substitutes and spot BTC; pure yield participants and passive holders are less favored.