âIn a historic shift for institutional Bitcoin adoption, Strategy (MSTR) has officially reclaimed its title as the worldâs largest institutional Bitcoin holder, surpassing BlackRockâs IBIT ETF as of today, April 21, 2026.
â1. The 815,000 BTC Power Move
âFollowing a massive $2.54 billion purchase of 34,164 BTC last week, Strategy's total holdings have climbed to 815,061 BTC. This move successfully edged out BlackRockâs iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT), which currently holds approximately 802,823 BTC. This marks the first time Strategy has held the top spot since Q2 2024, when the rapid launch of spot ETFs initially allowed BlackRock to take the lead.
â2. Diversifying the Lead: "BTC Gain"
âWhile BlackRock manages assets on behalf of clients, Strategy operates as a leveraged proprietary firm. Michael Saylor recently highlighted a new performance metric: "BTC Gain." * Strategy has grown its holdings by nearly 80,000 BTC in 2026 alone.
âThe company's stock has surged 37% in April, driven by its aggressive acquisition model and the marketâs appetite for its leveraged exposure.
â3. Market Impact and Price Action
âThis "flippening" comes as Bitcoin shows resilience above the $74,000 support level.
âThe Premium: Investors are currently paying a premium for MSTR shares, assigning a "bitcoin-acquisition value" to the companyâs equity that far outpaces the underlying asset's growth.
âAverage Cost: Despite the massive scale, Strategy has managed to keep its average purchase price at approximately $75,527, positioning the firm for significant gains as the market eyes a move toward $80,000.
âBottom Line: The battle for Bitcoin supremacy between "The King of ETFs" (BlackRock) and "The King of Corporate Treasuries" (Strategy) has reached a new peak. Strategyâs return to #1 signals a growing market confidence in leveraged corporate accumulation over passive ETF holding.
#BTC #MSTR #BlackRock #Bitcoin #InstitutionalCrypto #Write2Earn #BinanceSquare #2026withBinance
Who do you think will hold more Bitcoin by the end of 2026: The ETF giant or the Saylor-led machine?


