Strategy buys 22,337 Bitcoin in its latest treasury move, lifting its reported holdings to 761,068 BTC. The size of the purchase reinforces the company’s long-running accumulation strategy, while the lack of directly retrieved filing text means some details still rely on same-day secondary reports tied to Strategy’s reported March 16, 2026 disclosure.
Latest reported purchase: +22,337 BTC.
Secondary reports published on March 16 said Strategy bought 22,337 BTC for about $1.57 billion at an average price of $70,194 per coin, figures attributed to the company’s latest disclosure pattern and the related Strategy press release page. Coinwy could not directly inspect the full filing text in this run, so the article stays narrowly focused on the figures repeated across credible reports and the official URL structure.
Strategy’s Latest Buy Adds 22,337 BTC to Its Treasury
The reported purchase is large even by Strategy’s usual standards. At roughly $1.57 billion, it extends the company’s habit of using recurring capital raises to keep increasing its Bitcoin position rather than treating the asset as a short-term trade.
The arithmetic is consistent with Strategy’s previous update. The company said on March 9 that it held 738,731 BTC, and adding 22,337 BTC brings the total to 761,068 BTC, the balance reported for March 15 in follow-up coverage linked to the March 16 disclosure.
That consistency matters because the primary source was only partially verified in this environment. The official page URL fits Strategy’s established press-release pattern, but the exact filing metadata and SEC accession details were not independently confirmed here.
Total Holdings Reach 761,068 BTC
If the reported figures hold, Strategy’s aggregate acquisition cost now stands near $57.61 billion, with an average all-in purchase price of about $75,696 per Bitcoin, according to reporting tied to the company’s latest update. The newest tranche was bought below that average, which modestly improves the blended cost basis.
The new total also shows how central Bitcoin remains to Strategy’s corporate identity. The company has continued adding to its reserves through different market conditions, and each weekly-style update gives investors another checkpoint on how aggressively management is sticking to that approach.
For readers tracking corporate adoption, the headline number is the cumulative balance, not just the weekly buy. A treasury measured in the hundreds of thousands of BTC keeps Strategy at the center of discussions about public-company exposure to Bitcoin and the concentration risks that come with it.
Why the Market Watches Strategy Accumulation So Closely
Supporters of the strategy see another sign of conviction. Buying more Bitcoin while keeping the latest average purchase price below the portfolio-wide average supports the case that management is still executing a long-term reserve-asset thesis rather than reacting to short-term price swings.
Critics focus on a different risk. Each new purchase deepens Strategy’s dependence on Bitcoin’s market value and keeps attention on how future financing, volatility, or a prolonged drawdown could affect the balance sheet and investor sentiment.
That is why weekly accumulation updates tend to travel beyond the crypto press. They feed into broader debates over institutional ownership, a theme also reflected in Coinwy’s recent coverage of crypto fund inflows and arguments that Bitcoin’s resilience increasingly reflects an ownership shift toward larger holders.
The latest report does not, on its own, settle the bull-versus-bear debate around Strategy’s model. It does show that the company is still accumulating at scale, and it keeps the next official filing or press update in focus for investors who want direct confirmation of the full terms.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.
