Strategy has acquired 850 BTC for ~$99.7 million at ~$117,344 per bitcoin and has achieved BTC Yield of 26.0% YTD 2025. As of 9/21/2025, we hodl 639,835 $BTC acquired for ~$47.33 billion at ~$73,971 per bitcoin. $MSTR $STRC $STRK $STRF $STRD https://t.co/rG5pvryeYL
Hello, I lost my primary card and now I bought a new new card but it wouldnt allow me to connect to my wallet on the app. I still have my seed number, but when i try to pair new devices, it asked for my original card. Please assist.
#crypto@coolwallet
@AurusOfficial What happened to your app on google store? Is this Aurus project still going on or its over? Seems like rug already been pulled? So dissapointed to your management!
#crypto#bitcoin
Tether valuation at 515B is a beautiful number.
Maybe a bit bearish considering our current (and increasing) Bitcoin + Gold treasury, yet I'm very humbled.
Also truly excited for the next phase of growth of our company.
Thank you everyone❤️
#Bitcoin bull cycle is over — here’s why.
There’s a concept in on-chain data called Realized Cap. It works like this: when BTC enters a blockchain wallet, it's considered a "buy," and when it leaves, it's treated as a "sell." Using this idea, we can estimate an average cost basis for each wallet. Multiply that by the amount of BTC held, and you get the total Realized Cap. It’s often seen as the total capital that has entered the Bitcoin market through actual on-chain activity.
Market Cap is based on the last traded price on exchanges. Many people misunderstand this concept. When someone buys just $10 worth of BTC, the market cap doesn’t increase by only $10. Instead, prices are determined by the balance between buy and sell pressure in the order book.
When sell pressure is low, even a small buy can push the price—and therefore the market cap—significantly higher. $MSTR took advantage of this. By issuing convertible bonds and using the proceeds to buy BTC, the paper value of their holdings grew far more than the actual capital they deployed.
But when sell pressure is high, even large purchases fail to move the price. There are simply too many sellers. For example, when Bitcoin was trading near $100K, the market saw massive volumes, but the price barely moved.
So how can we tell if market cap is likely to rise relative to the capital being invested? Realized Cap shows how much actual money is entering the market, while Market Cap reflects how the price is reacting. If Realized Cap is growing but Market Cap is stagnant or falling, it means capital is flowing in, but prices aren’t rising—a classic bearish signal. On the flip side, if Realized Cap is flat while Market Cap is surging, it suggests that even a small amount of new capital is driving prices higher—a bullish sign.
Right now, we’re seeing the former—capital is entering the market, but prices aren't responding. That’s typical of a bear market.
Some people argue that on-chain data has limitations in capturing all capital flows, but in reality, most major flows are reflected on-chain—whether it's exchange deposits and withdrawals, custodial wallet activity, or ETF-related transactions.
In short: when small capital drives prices up, it's a bull market. When even large capital can't push prices upward, it's a bear. Current data clearly points to the latter. Sell pressure could ease anytime, but historically, real reversals take at least six months—so a short-term rally seems unlikely.