Strategy (MSTR) has spent years building one of the most aggressive Bitcoin treasury strategies in corporate history. But in 2025, something changed. The buying has slowed dramatically, and the company has shifted to what might be called "defensive mode."
A new CryptoQuant report highlights the transformation. After raising debt and equity relentlessly to accumulate Bitcoin (BTC), Strategy has now stockpiled $1.44 billion in cash reserves. That's enough to cover all preferred dividends and interest expenses for at least 12 months, with plans to extend that runway to 24 months.
A Dual-Reserve Model Emerges
This marks a fundamental shift in Strategy's treasury approach. The company now operates with two distinct buckets:
- Long-duration Bitcoin holdings
- Short-duration U.S. dollar liquidity for obligations
Perhaps more significant: Strategy has indicated it may sell Bitcoin or use derivatives if necessary. That's a notable departure from the previous "never sell" philosophy that became synonymous with the company's identity.
The implication? One of Bitcoin's strongest sources of marginal demand has cooled considerably. But the flip side is more interesting: the risk of forced sales during market stress has essentially evaporated.
What This Means for Drawdowns
CryptoQuant CEO Ki Young Ju argues that if Strategy holds onto its roughly 650,000 BTC stack, or only trims modestly, the market is unlikely to see anything like the brutal 65% drawdown experienced in 2022.
With Bitcoin trading about 25% below its all-time high, Ju suggests that even a bearish phase would more likely resemble sideways compression rather than a deep capitulation event. The liquidity profile is healthier, and structural risk has meaningfully declined.
The Numbers Behind the Slowdown
The data tells the story clearly:
- 134,000 BTC purchased monthly at the 2024 peak
- 9,100 BTC in November 2025
- Just 135 BTC acquired so far this month
That 24-month cash buffer signals preparation for what could be a prolonged consolidation phase in 2026. Strategy is digging in, not charging forward.
Worth noting: Michael Saylor's blended cost basis sits around $75,000 per Bitcoin, versus spot prices near $92,000. Over the past 2-4 years, his returns have lagged gold and other major benchmarks. Heavy purchases near cycle tops at $115,000, $120,000, and even $125,000 haven't aged particularly well as the market settles into late-cycle behavior.
For long-term holders, the message from analysts is straightforward: don't panic. The structural setup today is far different than previous cycles, and Strategy's new defensive posture might actually stabilize the market rather than destabilize it.