Saylor says Strategy unlikely to buy up rivals, as there’s too much uncertainty
Strategy chairman Michael Saylor says his company isn’t interested in acquiring other Bitcoin treasury companies, as doing so is fraught with uncertainty, although he didn’t entirely rule it out.
“Generally, we don’t have any plans to pursue MA [merger and acquisition] activity, even if it would look to be potentially accretive,” Saylor told investors on Thursday during Strategy’s third-quarter earnings call.
“There’s just a lot of uncertainty, and these things tend to stretch out six to nine months or a year,” he added. “An idea that looks good when you start might not still be a good idea six months later.”
Analysts have suggested that Bitcoin treasury companies may need to start buying each other as the number of players in the sector increases and companies compete to differentiate themselves from their rivals.
Strive is the first Bitcoin treasury company to conduct a merger, announcing in late September that it would acquire its rival , Semler Scientific, in an all-stock deal, resulting in the combined firm holding 11,006 BTC.
It would give Strive the 12th-largest Bitcoin holdings among public companies, behind Tesla. Strategy, by comparison, has 640,808 BTC, the largest holdings of any company.
Never say never: Saylor
Saylor didn’t totally rule out an acquisition, however, giving Strategy some wiggle room to change its mind on the topic.
“I don’t think we would ever say ‘we would never, never, never, ever,’ but what we would say is the plan, the strategy, the focus is to sell digital credit, improve the balance sheet, buy Bitcoin and communicate that to the credit and the equity investors,” Saylor said.
Strategy CEO Phong Le added that mergers and acquisitions for software companies, Strategy’s main business, are “very difficult.”
“There’s always something hiding behind what you actually think you purchase,” he said. “I would say the same thing about acquiring Bitcoin treasury companies.”
Strategy’s Bitcoin focus is easier to analyze
Saylor said that Strategy’s multiple Bitcoin purchases over the years have allowed the public to “instantly calculate whether it’s accretive or dilutive,” claiming they were “generally all accretive.”
“Our focus is to do high-speed transparent digital transactions and sell digital credit and buy Bitcoin,” he said. “We think that it’s a big advantage of the company that the business model is so transparent, predictable, and clear because the business model is predictable.”
That model, Saylor argued, makes it easy for equity and credit analysts to make decisions about and assess the quality of the company.
SP Global Ratings on Monday gave Strategy a “B-” credit rating, placing it in the same speculative, non-investment-grade category as junk bonds, but said the company’s outlook was stable.
Le said Strategy didn’t get any credit for its Bitcoin holdings in the rating, which was deducted from the company’s equity.
He said for the company’s rating to improve, it would be “appropriate at some point in time that Bitcoin be treated differently, and as a capital asset.”
Disclaimer: The content of this article solely reflects the author's opinion and does not represent the platform in any capacity. This article is not intended to serve as a reference for making investment decisions.
You may also like
Bitcoin News Update: With the Fed Loosening Policy, Optimists Eye $150K Bitcoin as Critics Highlight Vulnerabilities
- Fed's October rate cut to 3.75%-4.00% triggered $550M crypto liquidations, with Bitcoin near $111,000 amid range-bound trading. - Institutional bulls like Saylor predict $150K BTC by 2025, citing regulatory progress and tokenized securities adoption. - France proposes 2% BTC strategic reserve while California fines Coinhub $675K, highlighting regulatory scrutiny of crypto infrastructure. - Trump ally Lummis suggests Fed sell gold to buy 1M BTC, contrasting with critics like Schiff who question Bitcoin's

Bitcoin News Today: Bitcoin Faces Quantum Countdown: Immediate Measures Needed or Face Potential Extinction?
- HRF reports 6.51M BTC ($188B) at risk from quantum attacks, including dormant Satoshi-era coins. - Experts warn quantum computers could break Bitcoin’s encryption within 5–10 years, urging urgent solutions. - Quantum algorithms like Shor’s threaten Bitcoin’s security, but current post-quantum solutions exclude major blockchains. - U.S. and firms like IBM/Google advance quantum tech, intensifying urgency for Bitcoin-specific upgrades. - Bitcoin community debates action plans, with no consensus on mitigati
Crypto hacking losses fall by 85.7% as improvements in security surpass ongoing trust issues
- PeckShield reported 85.7% drop in October 2025 crypto hacking losses to $18.18M, attributed to improved security measures and threat response. - Smaller-scale attacks dominated, contrasting prior large DeFi breaches, while MEXC faced backlash for freezing $3M from crypto whale "The White Whale." - Crypto VC funding surged to $5.11B in October, with AI, prediction markets, and RWAs attracting most capital led by Coinbase Ventures and Binance Alpha. - Orama Labs surpassed $3.6M TVL after security audits, s
Tether’s $10 Billion Growth: Digital Bank’s Holdings Surpass Conventional Competitors
- Tether reported $10B net profit in Q1-Q3 2025, driven by $181.2B in reserves including $135B in U.S. Treasuries and $12.9B in gold. - XAUT gold-backed token reached $2.1B market cap as gold prices surged to $4,379/ounce amid global uncertainties. - USDT now serves 500M users globally, dominating emerging markets with its $1 peg and 34% market cap growth since January. - Tether plans USAT token launch and investment fund license in El Salvador while facing intensified regulatory scrutiny worldwide.

