Michael Saylor just posted three words on social media: "Orange Dots Matter." Attached was a chart showing MicroStrategy's Bitcoin holdings at 713,502
$BTC , overlaid on price action that crashed to around $60,000 before rebounding to $71,000. The implication is pretty clear, even if he didn't say it directly—Strategy likely bought the dip.
Saylor doesn't usually announce purchases in plain language. He drops cryptic posts, emojis, charts with minimal context. This fits the pattern. The "orange dots" reference almost certainly refers to the visual markers on the chart indicating accumulation points. If those dots cluster around the $60K zone, it suggests Strategy was adding to their position while everyone else was panicking or reducing exposure.
What's interesting is the consistency. For years now, Saylor's approach has been to treat Bitcoin volatility not as a reason to hedge or derisk, but as a buying opportunity. Every major dip, Strategy appears to step in. The playbook doesn't change: borrow against assets, deploy capital into
$BTC at lower prices, hold indefinitely. The $60K to $71K swing is exactly the kind of environment where that strategy either proves itself or becomes a liability. So far, it's worked more often than not.
The post itself is classic Saylor—cryptic enough to avoid direct accountability, clear enough that the market reads it as confirmation. Whether or not the actual purchase happened exactly at $60K, the message is the same: Strategy views drawdowns as accumulation zones, not exits. That stance influences sentiment, especially among retail and institutional holders who watch his moves closely. If he's buying, some will follow. If he's just posturing, the effect is similar. Either way, orange dots apparently still matter.
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