Michael Saylor just posted the orange tracker.
"The ₿eat Goes On."
Translation: Strategy bought more Bitcoin. Again.
Here's why this single post moves markets.
Saylor doesn't post the orange tracker to share a mood.
He posts it because SEC disclosure rules require him to signal purchases within a specific window before announcing them officially.
The tracker IS the announcement.
And it's arrived like clockwork through bull markets, bear markets, geopolitical crises, and 53% drawdowns.
Never stopped.
Here's the running tally of what "The ₿eat Goes On" has meant over time:
Strategy now holds over 500,000 BTC.
Cost basis somewhere around $66,000 per coin.
At $78K today that position is comfortably in profit.
But Saylor isn't measuring profit.
He's measuring BTC per share.
He's measuring how much of the fixed 21M supply his shareholders own.
He's playing a game with a different scoreboard than everyone else.
Now stack this buy signal against everything else moving simultaneously:
BlackRock buying $250M daily.
Morgan Stanley MSBT with zero outflow days.
Bitcoin closing its 4th consecutive green weekly candle.
$2.25 billion in shorts stacked below $80K waiting to be liquidated.
Trump declaring a presidential obligation to crypto.
Saylor was alone in this trade when he started.
Now he's being followed by the world's largest asset managers.
And he just bought again anyway.
The ₿eat doesn't go on because of the market.
It goes on because Saylor made a decision years ago that the market can't change.
#Bitcoin #Saylor #MicroStrategy #BTC #Crypto