What to Know
- Strategy (MSTR) now holds 815,061 BTC, passing BlackRock’s IBIT for the first time since Q2 2024
- The firm bought 34,164 BTC between April 13 and 19, its third-largest purchase on record
- IBIT sits at 802,824 BTC, leaving Strategy ahead by more than 12,000 BTC
- MSTR stock is up roughly 250% since early 2024 versus IBIT’s 55% gain, reflecting the used structure
Michael Saylor’s Strategy Bitcoin Holdings just crossed a line nobody thought they would reach again. The Virginia-based software-turned-treasury firm now sits on 815,061 BTC after a 34,164 BTC shopping run between April 13 and 19, edging ahead of BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust for the first time since the second quarter of 2024. The gap is 12,237 BTC. Small in dollar terms. Huge in what it says about who is actually buying this bear market.
How Strategy Bitcoin Holdings Clawed Back the Crown From BlackRock
Back in April 2024, IBIT blew past MSTR on the leaderboard in a matter of weeks. The ETF had roughly 273,000 BTC by early Q2 2024 while Strategy was parked at 214,400 BTC. Wall Street money walked in the door, bought the spot product, and that was that. For almost two years the ETF held the lead without breaking a sweat.
Then the market cracked. Bitcoin slid more than 50% from its October all-time high, and the mood flipped. Redemptions in the spot ETF complex slowed the inflow machine to a trickle. Meanwhile Saylor kept pressing the button. Nearly 80,000 BTC added in 2026 alone. The latest purchase, the third-biggest single acquisition the firm has ever booked, was the tipping point.
Strategy is an operating company that uses financial engineering to accumulate bitcoin in a used manner. IBIT is a passive vehicle. That difference is the whole story.

Why Does This Flip Matter for the Bitcoin Market?
Short answer: it shows who has conviction when prices bleed. The iShares Bitcoin Trust is a passive pipe. Money comes in, BlackRock buys spot. Money leaves, BlackRock sells. IBIT’s holdings stayed roughly flat through the drawdown, a decent outcome for a product that mirrors sentiment one creation unit at a time.
Strategy does the opposite. When bitcoin is on sale, Saylor turns the ATM equity issuance dial, floats convertible notes, or taps the STRC perpetual preferred stack and buys more. That is not how a fund works. That is a corporate treasury running a deliberate counter-cyclical bid. The leaderboard flipping is the receipt for that behaviour.
It also lands a rhetorical win for the old-school bitcoin treasury thesis. For months the narrative was that ETFs had made corporate BTC stockpiles obsolete. Why bother with MSTR’s premium and dilution risk when you can buy IBIT in your brokerage account? The answer, at least on April 21, is that one of them keeps buying through the pain and the other does not.
The Financial Engineering Behind Strategy’s Buying Spree
Saylor’s toolkit is not subtle. At-the-market equity programs let him print shares into strength. Convertible debt issues a low-coupon bond that converts to stock if MSTR rips higher, which it usually does when bitcoin rips higher. And then there is STRC, the perpetual preferred security that has quietly become the biggest funding engine of the current cycle.
STRC is a key differentiator. It is a scalable source of capital that does not dilute common holders the way pure equity raises do, and it does not mature the way convertibles eventually must. A significant slice of this year’s bitcoin accumulation has been funded straight off that instrument. Critics call it a house of cards. Holders call it a flywheel. Both camps agree it has worked, at least while bitcoin stays above Strategy’s blended cost basis.
The risk, of course, is what happens if bitcoin breaks lower and stays there. Used treasury plays do not die slowly. They die when the refinancing window closes. For now the window is open and Saylor is driving a truck through it.
- ATM equity issuance: sells MSTR shares directly into the market when the stock runs hot
- Convertible debt: low-coupon bonds that flip to equity on upside, funding BTC buys with minimal cash drag
- STRC perpetual preferred: non-maturing capital source that has backed much of the 2026 accumulation
- Operating cash flow: a smaller but still active contributor from the legacy software business
Two Vehicles, Two Returns: MSTR Versus IBIT Performance
Since IBIT listed in January 2024 the ETF is up roughly 55%. Strategy is up around 250% over the same window. The spread is the use working, and anyone who bought MSTR for the beta got exactly what was advertised.
The catch is that use cuts both ways. MSTR’s drawdowns during the recent slide from the October peak were brutal, while IBIT simply did what it was designed to do and tracked spot. Retail investors who can’t stomach 60% equity drawdowns do not belong in MSTR even if they like the thesis. That is the trade-off baked into the two tickers.
What makes this week’s overtake particularly loud is that IBIT remains the fastest ETF in history to reach $70 billion in assets, crossing the mark in only 341 trading days. That record still stands. IBIT is not shrinking. Strategy is just accumulating faster than the ETF can attract net new spot buyers during a downturn.
IBIT has gained around 55% since listing in January 2024, while Strategy has risen roughly 250%, driven by its used structure.
What Comes Next for the Largest Bitcoin Holder
Strategy’s lead is 12,237 BTC. That is not a moat. One strong creation day at IBIT, or one week of net inflows, could shrink that number quickly if sentiment flips. The real question is whether Saylor can keep the buying cadence going into Q3 without stressing the capital stack, and whether the ETF machine wakes back up if bitcoin reclaims its prior range.
There is also the broader allocator story. A Nomura survey this week showed roughly 80% of Japanese investment professionals plan to allocate up to 5% of their portfolios to digital assets by 2029. That is a pipeline of institutional demand that flows almost exclusively through vehicles like IBIT, not MSTR. If that demand materialises on schedule, the ETF reclaims the crown and probably keeps it.
Until then, the leaderboard has changed hands. Saylor gets his victory lap. BlackRock gets to remind everyone that the race was never really the point. And the rest of the market gets a clean snapshot of who keeps bidding when the tape is red.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much bitcoin does Strategy own in 2026?
Strategy holds 815,061 BTC as of its latest filing on April 20, 2026. The company added 34,164 BTC between April 13 and 19 in its third-largest single purchase on record, pushing it ahead of BlackRock’s IBIT as the largest known bitcoin holder among publicly disclosed entities.
How much bitcoin does BlackRock's IBIT hold?
BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust currently holds 802,824 BTC. The spot ETF’s holdings stayed roughly flat through the recent drawdown with only a modest decline in assets under management, which let Strategy’s aggressive accumulation close the gap and then overtake the fund for the first time since Q2 2024.
Why is Strategy's stock up more than IBIT?
Strategy uses use. The firm funds bitcoin purchases through at-the-market equity issuance, convertible debt, and the STRC perpetual preferred security, which magnifies gains when bitcoin rises. IBIT is a passive spot ETF that tracks bitcoin one-to-one. Since January 2024, MSTR is up roughly 250% while IBIT has gained about 55%.
What is STRC and why does it matter for Strategy?
STRC is a perpetual preferred equity security issued by Strategy. It provides scalable, non-maturing capital that funds bitcoin buys without diluting common shareholders the way equity raises do. A significant portion of the 2026 accumulation has been financed through STRC, making it the most important funding tool in Saylor’s current playbook.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice. Every investment and trading decision involves risk. Readers should conduct their own research before making any financial decisions.


































815k BTC on the balance sheet and Saylor still isn’t slowing down. wild to think Q2 2024 was the last time MSTR was ahead of IBIT on raw coin count.
the framing here is a bit off. IBIT holds BTC for thousands of clients, Strategy holds it for shareholders backed by convertible debt. comparing stack sizes without mentioning leverage skews the picture.
34,164 BTC in a single month is nuts
does anyone know the average entry for the April tranche? curious how it compares to the ~$28k blended cost basis they were sitting at before the last two raises, and whether the new notes pushed the breakeven much higher.