Michael Saylor is at it again. The Strategy executive chairman posted “Green Dots ₿eget Orange Dots” on December 21. The message included a graph tracking Strategy’s Bitcoin purchases.
This isn’t random social media noise. Saylor has used this exact pattern throughout 2025. Each “green dots” post typically precedes an SEC filing announcing major Bitcoin acquisitions. The filings usually drop on Monday mornings.
Strategy Inc, MSTR
The timing creates questions. Bitcoin is currently battling the $90,000 resistance level. Heavy liquidity clusters have formed at this price point, creating what analysts call a natural barrier.
Bitcoin (BTC) Price
Crypto analyst Ted Pillows expects market makers to sweep through three liquidity clusters this week. On-chain data reveals large concentrations of buy and sell orders stacked around $90,000. The biggest upside liquidity sits at $90,000, while downside clusters form between $86,000 and $84,000.
Strategy now controls 671,268 BTC. That’s 3.2% of Bitcoin’s entire supply. The company spent $963 million acquiring 10,624 BTC in early December alone.
But there’s a cost. MSTR stock has collapsed 43% since January 2025. Bitcoin dropped 30% from its October peak. MSCI is considering booting Strategy from global indices, claiming the company functions more like an investment fund than an operating business.
Saylor’s previous “green dots” signal brought more than purchases. Strategy also created a Bitcoin reserve for dividend payments. This suggests the current message might include additional strategic announcements beyond simple accumulation.
Here’s where things get uncomfortable. Strategy’s mNAV ratio sits at 0.93. The critical level is 1.0. Company president Phong Le stated Strategy would only sell Bitcoin if the mNAV drops below 1 and capital markets freeze.
The math is simple. Another 15-20% Bitcoin decline pushes the ratio past the threshold. If Bitcoin falls under $75,000, Strategy faces a scenario it’s never encountered: forced liquidation.
Strategy set aside $1.44 billion as a safety buffer. That reserve exists specifically to avoid selling Bitcoin holdings. But if both conditions hit simultaneously, the company’s “never sell” promise faces its first real test.
Institutional demand continues despite volatility. BlackRock’s Bitcoin ETF remains among 2025’s top six ETFs. Corporate treasuries stay active in the market. ETFs maintain substantial balances even after recent outflows.
Tom Lee’s Fundstrat warned Bitcoin could reach $60,000, though long-term forecasts remain bullish. This creates tension for Strategy’s leveraged approach. The entire model depends on Bitcoin appreciation and open capital markets.
Saylor’s posts influence trader behavior before actual purchases occur. Some reduce exposure near resistance levels. Others hedge against potential selling zones around anticipated announcements.
Strategy has never sold Bitcoin throughout its accumulation campaign. The reserve represents one of the largest corporate cryptocurrency holdings globally.
The $90,000 level will test this conviction. Market structure suggests major price movement as liquidity zones get challenged. Strategy’s next SEC filing will confirm whether green dots translate to orange dots once again.
Bitcoin currently trades around $89,600. The company’s average purchase price sits well below current levels, providing some cushion. But with stock down 43% and the mNAV ratio approaching critical levels, pressure mounts on Saylor’s strategy.
The post Strategy (MSTR) Stock: Saylor’s Cryptic Post Teases Bitcoin Buy Despite Stock Meltdown appeared first on Blockonomi.


