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A post by Michael Saylor shared a chart tracking a “Strategy Tracker” that pairs Bitcoin purchases over time with price movement and an average cost trend. The dataset highlights how institutional-style accumulation has progressed across multiple market cycles.
The tracker shows total holdings of 780,897 BTC, valued at $59.10 billion. The average acquisition cost is $75,577 per Bitcoin.
Cumulative tracked purchases total 8,780,897 BTC across 106 events, reflecting long-term accumulation behavior rather than short-term trading.
Early accumulation occurred when Bitcoin traded between $10,000 and $40,000. During this phase, purchases were consistent but relatively small, resulting in the average cost line moving gradually upward.
As prices declined toward the $20,000 to $30,000 range, buying activity continued. The average cost stabilized during this period before rising again, indicating continued capital deployment without hesitation.
Later, Bitcoin entered a strong upward move, climbing beyond $100,000. During this phase, purchase sizes increased and buying frequency rose. The average cost also climbed sharply, signaling a shift toward momentum-driven accumulation.
The chart frames several price ranges that relate to the average acquisition cost and prior market behavior:
The relationship between Bitcoin’s price and the average cost basis is presented as central to the current setup. When Bitcoin trades above the cost basis, positions are described as being in profit; when price approaches the cost level, it becomes a decision point for market participants.
Recent data places Bitcoin hovering near the cost level, keeping the market in a narrow range where direction is described as uncertain. At the same time, continued buying during both rallies and pullbacks is characterized as steady and consistent.
The chart’s purchase markers also indicate larger allocations at higher price levels, suggesting increasing capital commitment over time. The absence of selling activity across the timeline is presented as reinforcement of a long-term positioning strategy focused on building exposure across cycles.
Future price movement is described as dependent on how Bitcoin behaves around the $75,000 range. Holding above this level is presented as supportive of another move toward $100,000 and beyond, while a breakdown below it would shift short-term market direction toward lower support zones.
Overall, the chart is presented as a structured view of accumulation, cost growth, and price interaction, illustrating how institutional participation has evolved alongside Bitcoin’s expanding market cycle.
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