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07/22/2025 - Updated on 07/23/2025
Shorting Bitcoin used to be a reliable trade. But a growing share of circulating supply is now locked inside ETF reserves, sovereign balance sheets, and Strategy’s corporate treasury, held by entities with long horizons, institutional financing, and no pressure to sell. That structural shift is quietly making bearish positions some of the most dangerous trades in crypto.
Officially, Strategy is still a technology firm.
Functionally, the market increasingly treats it as a leveraged Bitcoin acquisition vehicle.
That distinction matters because the company’s strategy is fundamentally different from traditional corporate treasury management. Most firms hold reserve assets defensively:
Strategy instead converted enormous portions of its balance sheet into Bitcoin exposure and repeatedly doubled down during volatility.
Even more unusually, it continued buying through drawdowns severe enough to bankrupt entire crypto firms.
That consistency changed investor perception.
The company stopped looking like a speculative participant and started looking like a permanent buyer.
The market keeps expecting the sell-off that never comes
Bitcoin’s historical cycles trained traders to expect forced liquidation events:
But Strategy disrupted part of that reflex.
Its holdings behave differently from speculative capital because they are not actively rotating through market cycles. The company has repeatedly signaled that its reserves are strategic, not tactical.
That creates a strange effect on market psychology:
short sellers continue expecting liquidity to return to the market, while large portions of supply remain effectively locked away.
Over time, this begins to resemble a black hole in Bitcoin’s circulation structure.
Supply disappears into corporate vaults and does not come back out.
Why the treasury moat matters more than the balance sheet
The real moat is not the Bitcoin itself.
It is the company’s ability to continuously access capital markets while using Bitcoin as the center of its financial identity.
That changes the game entirely.
Traditional holders eventually face liquidity pressure:
Strategy operates differently because its market narrative strengthens when Bitcoin rises. That allows the company to repeatedly raise capital, restructure debt, and reinforce accumulation rather than unwind it.
In effect, the treasury itself becomes self-reinforcing.
The higher Bitcoin climbs, the stronger the moat becomes.
This is quietly changing Bitcoin’s market structure
Bitcoin was originally designed around open circulation.
But the ETF era and corporate treasury era are gradually reshaping that model into something tighter and more illiquid:
Strategy sits at the center of this transformation because its accumulation strategy is unusually aggressive and unusually public.
Every additional purchase sends the same signal to the market:
more supply is leaving circulation permanently.
That changes how traders price downside risk.
Why this makes Bitcoin increasingly difficult to short
Shorting works best in markets with abundant liquidity and emotionally reactive holders.
Bitcoin increasingly has neither.
Large pools of supply are now controlled by entities with:
That creates an uncomfortable setup for bearish positioning.
Short sellers are no longer betting against retail euphoria alone. They are betting against a growing wall of structurally illiquid capital.
And illiquid markets behave violently when demand accelerates.
The real danger is the reflexive loop nobody can stop
The black hole effect becomes most dangerous when combined with new inflows.
If institutional demand rises while liquid supply keeps shrinking, Bitcoin enters a reflexive cycle:
The loop feeds itself.
This is why many analysts increasingly describe Bitcoin as supply-constrained rather than purely demand-driven.
Wall Street may have underestimated the corporate treasury era
For years, institutions viewed Bitcoin mainly as a speculative macro asset.
What they failed to anticipate was the emergence of corporate entities willing to treat accumulation itself as a permanent business strategy.
That changes Bitcoin from a traded asset into something closer to strategic reserve infrastructure.
And once companies begin competing for long-term ownership rather than short-term exposure, liquidity starts disappearing faster than markets can comfortably handle.
The black hole is not about ownership — it’s about circulation
Strategy does not need to “own” Bitcoin to reshape the market.
It only needs to remove enough supply from active circulation that pricing dynamics start changing underneath everyone else.
That process is already happening:
Bitcoin becomes harder to move downward not because volatility disappears, but because available supply becomes increasingly difficult to access during periods of rising demand.
The market may still be underestimating what comes next
The biggest misconception about Strategy’s Bitcoin position is that it is simply a large bet.
It is not.
It is a structural force acting on the supply side of the market itself.
And if corporate accumulation continues accelerating alongside ETF demand, Bitcoin may gradually evolve into an asset where scarcity matters more than speculation.
That is the scenario short sellers fear most.
Not hype.
Not volatility.
But a market where there simply is not enough liquid Bitcoin left to sustain the trade against it.
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