Saylor’s Bitcoin Chart Returns After Strategy Sold BTC, but He Says Orange Dots Tell Only Part of the Story
Key Takeaways
- Michael Saylor’s orange-dot chart has often appeared before Strategy bitcoin purchase announcements.
- Strategy recently sold BTC recently while continuing to hold one of the largest corporate bitcoin positions.
- Investors are watching whether the next update signals buying, selling or another strategic move.
The Orange Dots Return After Strategy Breaks Its Old Pattern
On July 12, Michael Saylor posted his widely followed orange-dot bitcoin accumulation chart for Strategy (Nasdaq: MSTR) on X, a visual that has become a ritual in the bitcoin investment community and is often seen as a signal that the company may soon announce another bitcoin purchase.
Previously, each new chart appearance often preceded a bitcoin purchase announcement, leading investors to treat it as a buying signal. After the company’s recent sale of 3,588 BTC for $216 million, however, its latest appearance could signal a sale or another strategic move rather than a clear buying cue.

The chart tracks Strategy’s bitcoin purchases over time, with orange dots marking acquisitions and illustrating how it built its BTC position across market cycles. The latest version shows 113 purchase events, with 843,775 BTC held at an aggregate purchase value of about $63.69 billion and an average acquisition price of roughly $75,476 per bitcoin, reflecting a long series of acquisitions across both lower and higher price periods.
For investors, the orange dots became more than a historical record. Saylor, the executive chairman of Strategy, posted the chart almost weekly, and market participants often saw a new appearance as a signal that another bitcoin purchase announcement could follow the next day, turning it into a closely watched market indicator.
Strategy’s Recent Sales Changed the Meaning of the Signal
That expectation became less certain after Strategy began using its bitcoin holdings in a different way. The company recently disclosed that it sold 3,588 BTC between June 29 and July 5, creating fresh questions about whether the orange-dot chart still represents a preview of future purchases.
Strategy said the proceeds from the sale were used to support its preferred stock obligations and strengthen its U.S. dollar reserve. The company has explained that maintaining liquidity helps it manage corporate commitments while continuing to operate its bitcoin-focused treasury strategy.
The larger sale followed an earlier smaller transaction in which Strategy sold 32 BTC between May 26 and May 31 at an average price of $77,135 per bitcoin, generating approximately $2.5 million. However, Strategy subsequently resumed buying and acquired more bitcoin than it had sold, indicating that the reduction in holdings did not signal a departure from its accumulation strategy.
That history is now central to how investors interpret Saylor’s latest chart post. The previous pattern suggested that selling activity could be temporary before another purchase, but the recent 3,588 BTC sale has made the next move less predictable.
Saylor Remains Focused on Bitcoin Despite Treasury Changes
The recent sales have raised questions about Strategy’s bitcoin management approach, but Saylor continues to describe bitcoin as a long-term financial asset. He has said bitcoin adoption is entering a broader phase focused on digital capital and wider integration into financial markets.
That shift suggests the orange-dot chart may no longer serve only as a purchase signal, as investors who once viewed new chart posts as indicators of upcoming acquisitions now face the possibility that Strategy is also using its bitcoin holdings for broader treasury management, raising the key question of whether the recent sales are temporary liquidity measures or signal a change in how the company manages its bitcoin position.
Strategy’s latest dashboard shows 843,775 BTC valued at approximately $53.991 billion based on the displayed bitcoin price of $63,988. The dashboard also shows a $35.17 billion market capitalization for MSTR, $54.838 billion enterprise value, 1.02 mNAV ratio, $2.55 billion in U.S. dollar reserves, $6.754 billion in debt and $15.464 billion in preferred stock value.

