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💥 Just Now! Did One Person Buy Out All the Bitcoin Supply?
Michael Saylor doesn't play by the rules. While others trade coins based on news, he trades based on "hard accumulation." Today he dropped a line that made me think for half a day—my spine went cold: "We can buy more bitcoin than sellers can sell."
Translation: The circulating supply on the market isn't enough to fill my teeth.
Let's look at the data. He's currently holding 730,000 bitcoins. What does that mean? The total supply is only 19.6 million, and his company alone accounts for nearly 3.7%. What's even scarier is that he still has $35.8 billion in "ammunition"—all pre-registered stock issuance quotas that can be deployed anytime. At the current price of $70,000, this could directly swallow 510,000 bitcoins.
Think about it: how many bitcoins are available for trading on exchanges at any given time? Around 2.78 million. With a little more effort, Saylor alone could pocket 1/3 of the liquid supply.
This isn't hoarding anymore—this is "locking up supply."
On-chain data confirms it. Exchange bitcoin balances have already declined by 200,000 this year, hitting the lowest level since 2019. The old whales sit quietly, only retail investors panic-selling. Where are the chips flowing? Clear as day—to hoarders like Saylor who only buy, never sell.
Here's the critical part: The Fed is watching inflation (PCE is now at 3.1%), rate cuts will likely be delayed until September or December at the earliest, market expectations have dropped from three cuts to one. But think about it—once the Fed really opens the money taps and institutional capital floods in, they discover there's no supply left—
Will bitcoin go up or down then?
Saylor's already positioned himself for that moment. Is he losing? Paper losses are an accounting matter; he has no intention of selling anyway. He's betting that when the dollar gets printed, the whole world will come pump his bags.
So is he a prophet or a gambler?
See you in the comments.
#Gate2月衍生品市场份额创新高 #比特币支撑阻力位分析 $BTC