A major Canadian bank—the country's sixth-largest—just scooped up 1.47 million shares of MSTR, worth around $273 million. Why? They're playing the indirect Bitcoin game.
Traditional finance giants are catching on. Instead of buying BTC directly, they're piling into Strategy's stock as a backdoor route. It's becoming the preferred method for institutions looking to get crypto exposure without diving straight into the asset itself.
This move signals something bigger: legacy banks are warming up to Bitcoin, even if they're doing it through a layer of indirection. Strategy is turning into the bridge between old-school finance and digital assets.
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WalletsWatcher
· 3h ago
Traditional finance has finally admitted it—they simply don’t dare to buy Bitcoin directly.
Institutions are all playing the middleman game, and MSTR is just their financial fig leaf.
The real breakthrough is right here... Holding directly and having indirect exposure are two completely different things.
Established banks pretend to be conservative, but they’ve already gotten in; they’re just doing it covertly.
A $2.7 billion bet on MSTR—how is that conservative? This is clearly institutions collectively breaking down.
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LightningClicker
· 13h ago
Oh wow, traditional finance is starting to play the indirect game now—it's really something.
The MSTR channel is getting hotter and hotter, and banks are all using it as a springboard.
They just don't want to be criticized for holding directly, so this way it's more "compliant."
But on the flip side, it shows that big money is really in.
Signals for Bitcoin taking off are getting stronger and stronger.
This is how traditional finance enters the space—they always need a reason that looks good on the surface.
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AirdropHunterZhang
· 13h ago
Haha, traditional finance is finally making a fortune quietly, and they still have to go through MSTR just to touch Bitcoin—they're so timid.
Retail investors like us have been bottom-fishing long before institutions did. Now it's their turn to catch on late—this is truly a free ticket to get in.
Trying to get in with just 27.3 billion? Even when I went all-in, I wasn't this particular. Wake up, everyone, miners can't even pay their electricity bills now.
This is what I've been saying—MSTR has become the real hot commodity. It's even more stable than buying coins directly. The old banks have finally figured it out.
A major Canadian bank—the country's sixth-largest—just scooped up 1.47 million shares of MSTR, worth around $273 million. Why? They're playing the indirect Bitcoin game.
Traditional finance giants are catching on. Instead of buying BTC directly, they're piling into Strategy's stock as a backdoor route. It's becoming the preferred method for institutions looking to get crypto exposure without diving straight into the asset itself.
This move signals something bigger: legacy banks are warming up to Bitcoin, even if they're doing it through a layer of indirection. Strategy is turning into the bridge between old-school finance and digital assets.