Strategy, Michael Saylor’s flagship vehicle and the largest public holder of Bitcoin, has surpassed 800,000 BTC in total holdings after its latest purchases. The company disclosed in an 8-K filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission that it bought 34,164 BTC for $2.54 billion between April 13 and 19, at an average price of $74,395 per coin. The new purchase lifts Strategy’s total BTC under custody to 815,061 coins, purchased for $61.56 billion. The firm had about 780,897 BTC after a $1 billion buy just a week earlier. By coin count, the April tranche ranks as Strategy’s third-largest BTC acquisition, behind 55,500 BTC and 51,780 BTC purchases made in November 2024. Key takeaways New BTC haul: 34,164 BTC acquired for $2.54 billion (April 13–19), at an average price of $74,395 per coin. Funding mix: Stretch (STRC), the perpetual preferred security, supplied about $2.18 billion (roughly 85.7% of the total proceeds); Class A common stock contributed about $366 million. Record-...
Mastercard is quietly upgrading its payments back-end by testing the use of regulated stablecoins to settle card transactions. The pilot, conducted in collaboration with SoFi Technologies and its Galileo platform, aims to move settlement between banks off traditional rails and onto digital dollars, while keeping the consumer checkout experience unchanged at the point of sale. The initiative centers on SoFiUSD, a dollar-backed stablecoin issued by SoFi Bank, N.A., and is positioned within Mastercard’s broader Multi-Token Network (MTN) vision for tokenized money. As the industry watches the evolution of stablecoins from crypto-native instruments to mainstream settlement rails, Mastercard’s approach signals a strategic pivot: the networks that power card payments may increasingly rely on regulated digital assets to clear and settle transactions faster and with greater liquidity efficiency. The company’s plan also places it in a competitive stance with Visa, which has already piloted stabl...