Saylor's Silent Treatment: Has Strategy Finally Hit the Bitcoin Buy Button's Off Switch?
Bitcoin is hovering around $67,500, up a modest 1.5% in the last 24 hours. That's the financial equivalent of watching paint dry for the 200K crowd—cute, but not exactly getting the dopamine flowing. But pair it with the deafening silence from Michael Saylor's Strategy, and suddenly everyone's refreshing Twitter like it's 2017 all over again: has the most aggressive institutional buyer in crypto history finally called it quits?
The Saylor Tracker went dark on March 29, 2026. Zero purchase announcement. No fresh BTC disclosure. After 13 consecutive weeks of buying, the market was conditioned to expect near-weekly accumulation from the Strategy machine like clockwork. Forty-eight hours without word and the timeline is already writing fan fiction about what's going on.
Profit-taking chatter has picked up accordingly, with degens on CT already drafting elegies for the bull run. But before anyone declares victory or disaster, remember: U.S. economic data is dropping soon, and ETF flow reports are due this week. The next 72 hours carry some weight, so maybe don't panic-sell your ETH just yet.
On the charts, BTC is wedged between $65,000 support and $72,000 resistance like a crypto sandwich—technically delicious but emotionally exhausting. The yearly trend still shows a 17% decline, though March opened at $65,000 before the recent run that got invalidated last week. The 30-day range has held without a serious test, because apparently even Bitcoin needs to touch grass sometimes.
Three scenarios worth watching: volume comes back, Strategy or another institutional player resumes buying, and BTC clears $72,000 on a daily close toward $75,000. That's the bullish fantasy. Or consolidation between $65,000 and $72,000 through early April as markets digest macro data—boring, but at least nobody loses money. Alternatively, a confirmed close below $
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