Michael Saylor’s Strategy acquired 45,000 Bitcoin (BTC) in 30 days. Every other public company combined bought 1,000. New on-chain data confirms the corporate market now has one active participant.
TLDR
- On-chain data (March 28, 2026) shows Strategy acquired 45,000 BTC in the preceding 30 days.
- All other reporting public corporations combined for 1,000 BTC, a 2% share of total monthly corporate demand.
- Aggregate corporate buying outside Strategy has contracted 99% since August 2025.
- Strategy now holds 762,099 BTC, equal to 3.6% of the 21 million supply cap and 65% of all corporate-held Bitcoin.
- Bitcoin depreciated from $126,000 to $70,000 between its 2025 peak and late March 2026, freezing secondary corporate entries.
- Public firms holding Bitcoin reached 148 entities. Active buyers: one.
Corporate Bitcoin demand has collapsed, but one company is still buying at scale.
New on-chain data shows Michael Saylor’s Strategy acquired 45,000 BTC in the past 30 days, accounting for 98% of all corporate accumulation. Every other public company on record combined for 1,000 BTC. That figure represents a 99% contraction in external corporate buying since August 2025.
The corporate Bitcoin market now has one active participant. This is what that concentration means.
Why This Matters
148 firms hold Bitcoin. One firm is responsible for 98% of new corporate accumulation. The count of holders is rising while the distribution of buying activity is narrowing to a single entity.
Strategy controls 65% of all Bitcoin held by public companies globally. No other firm is within range of closing that gap at current acquisition rates.
When one firm drives 98% of corporate demand volume, its capital access, acquisition timing, and balance sheet decisions directly shape the institutional price signal. Secondary holders and allocators operate in a market that one firm sets.
The Accumulation Divergence
Glassnode data for the 30 days ending March 28, 2026 records 45,000 BTC acquired by Strategy and 1,000 BTC acquired by all 147 other reporting entities combined. The split is 98% to 2%.
The count of public firms holding Bitcoin reached 148, its highest level on record. Volume data confirms that holding Bitcoin and actively accumulating it are now separate behaviors. More firms are on the register. Almost none are adding to their positions.
This divergence did not emerge gradually. The 99% contraction in external corporate buying has occurred within a seven-month window, from August 2025 to March 2026.
| Entity | 30-Day Acquired | Total Holdings | Q1 2026 Status |
|---|---|---|---|
| Strategy | +45,000 BTC | 762,099 BTC | Active accumulation |
| MARA Holdings | 0 | ~46,000 BTC | Static |
| Tesla | 0 | ~11,500 BTC | Static |
| Metaplanet | +~100 BTC | ~3,000 BTC | Minor activity |
| DDC Enterprise | +~50 BTC | ~500 BTC | Minor activity |
| All Others (143 firms) | +~850 BTC | Distributed | Passive hold |
Concentration and Market Structure Risk
Strategy controls approximately 65% of all Bitcoin held by public companies globally. Its 762,099 BTC balance equals 3.6% of the fixed 21 million supply cap.

Structural Risk: When one entity controls 65% of all corporate-held supply and 98% of active monthly demand, the corporate market loses independent price discovery. Strategy’s acquisition decisions and capital access now function as the primary variable in institutional Bitcoin demand. This concentration has not been publicly addressed by secondary holders, regulators, or institutional allocators.
MARA Holdings and Tesla maintained static balances through Q1 2026. Both entities are prioritizing capital preservation over further acquisition during the current period of downside pressure. Neither has disclosed a forward accumulation plan.
The corporate Bitcoin market now has one active buyer. Every structural trend in the data points in the same direction: that gap widens from here.
Why Other Firms Stopped Buying
Bitcoin depreciated from its 2025 peak of $126,000 to approximately $70,000 in late March 2026. Corporations that entered during Q4 2025 price appreciation now carry significant unrealized losses. The institutional adoption cycle that accelerated through mid-2025 has reversed for all but one participant.
Standard equity issuance and direct cash deployment, the primary acquisition routes for most public firms, have become capital-destructive at current price levels. There is no financial basis for a capital-constrained firm to increase a losing position without a specialized financing structure.
Geopolitical instability in the Middle East has reinforced risk-off positioning across conservative corporate treasuries. This explains the bulk of the 99% volume contraction relative to August 2025 levels.
Strategy’s Capital Access Advantage
Strategy finances acquisitions through its 42/42 framework: $42 billion in planned equity issuance and $42 billion in fixed-income instruments. The firm deploys “Stretch” and “Strike” preferred stock structures to access capital independent of prevailing market conditions.
This financing architecture has no equivalent among the 147 other corporate Bitcoin holders. The gap is structural, not behavioral. Most firms face dilutive issuance costs that make acquisition at $70,000 financially indefensible using conventional capital routes.
Strategy’s capacity to accumulate during volatility expansion, while all others are frozen, means its share of corporate holdings will continue to widen for as long as current conditions persist.
International Activity
Metaplanet and DDC Enterprise recorded combined acquisitions of fewer than 150 BTC during the reporting period. These entries maintain the upward count of global corporate holders while producing no measurable impact on aggregate demand volume.
North American and European corporate activity outside Strategy registered near-zero for the fourth consecutive week. The long tail of international adoption continues at a rate that does not alter the structural picture in aggregate.
What the Data Confirms
On-chain data from Glassnode and Arkham Intelligence, cross-referenced with SEC filings, confirms the corporate Bitcoin market has entered a phase of extreme one-sided consolidation. One firm is accumulating. One hundred and forty-seven are holding. None is closing the gap.
The concentration introduces supply-side and demand-side risks that allocators have not yet priced publicly. Strategy’s next acquisition cycle will determine whether the 98% demand share holds, widens, or reverses. Track current Bitcoin ETF flows and institutional demand data for supporting context.
Data source: Glassnode on-chain analytics, Arkham Intelligence treasury tracking, and SEC public filings reviewed as of March 28, 2026. All figures reflect the most recent 30-day reporting window.
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Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice. Cryptocurrency markets are volatile, and readers should conduct their own research before making financial decisions.

Pijus Paul is the Founder and Lead Cryptocurrency Market Analyst at Cryptowealthnet. He specializes in Bitcoin and altcoin price predictions supported by technical analysis, market cycle evaluation, and risk-managed scenario planning. His price forecasts emphasize probability, structure, and disciplined strategy rather than speculation. LinkedIn: Pijus Paul
