Written by: Jawad Hussain
Compiled by: Plain Language Blockchain

The world’s largest asset management company and a 37-year-old software company that shifted its entire asset holdings to digital assets are locked in a race to accumulate Bitcoin on an unprecedented scale in the crypto market.
As of March 16, 2026, BlackRock's iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT) held 784,062 bitcoins, while Strategy (formerly MicroStrategy) held 761,068 bitcoins.
The gap between the two is approximately 22,994 coins. At Strategy's current purchasing pace, this gap could close within a few days.
This is more than just a footnote in the history of digital assets. It is one of the most impactful financial stories of 2026.
Two entities with different structures, motivations, and risk profiles are vying for the same finite asset. Bitcoin has a fixed supply cap of 21 million coins.
For every coin the firm buys, one is no longer waiting to be sold. The race between BlackRock and strategy is accelerating the supply squeeze long predicted by Bitcoin exchange operators.
This section will outline how each participant accumulates Bitcoin, what drives their buying speed, what the risks are for both sides, and what the outcome of the pandemic race means for off-exchange investors. Whether you hold IBIT donations, MSTR stock, or directly hold Bitcoin, without exception, the pandemic race directly impacts the market you participate in.
BlackRock and Strategy both hold massive amounts of Bitcoin. However, their reasons for holding it, the mechanisms behind it, and their associated obligations are completely different.
BlackRock does not purchase Bitcoin for itself. The company launched the iShares Bitcoin Trust (ticker symbol: IBIT) on Nasdaq in January 2024, providing investors with a regulated vehicle to gain Bitcoin exposure by directly holding assets. When investors purchase IBIT shares, authorized participants (large financial institutions) buy Bitcoin on the open market and deliver it to the fund. When investors sell IBIT, the process involves Bitcoin being repurchased from the fund and returned to the market.
This means that BlackRock's Bitcoin holdings are a function of investor demand. IBIT's holdings grow when institutional and retail buyers want full exposure to Bitcoin through traditional accounts. Holdings shrink when sentiment turns bearish and investors redeem their holdings. BlackRock has no strategic directive to accumulate Bitcoin; it is a custodian. The Bitcoin it holds belongs economically to IBIT shareholders, not BlackRock itself.
According to SoSoValue data, IBIT has attracted a cumulative net inflow of $63.21 billion since its launch. In the week of March 9-13 alone, IBIT received a total net inflow of $600.1 million, accounting for 78% of the net Bitcoin inflows into ETFs that week. The fund has maintained positive inflows every day since March 9, highlighting the institutional demand driving BlackRock's Bitcoin accumulation.
Strategy's model is the complete opposite. Instead of waiting for investors to raise funds, the company actively subscribes to funds specifically for purchasing Bitcoin. These funds primarily come from three sources: convertible bonds (debt instruments convertible into MSTR common stock); at-market (ATM) equity offerings (selling new shares directly to the market); and preferred stock instruments, most recently STRC preferred stock with an 11.5% annualized yield, sold to monthly investors who provide funds directly for purchasing Bitcoin.
Once Strategy secures cash, it purchases Bitcoin through institutional exchanges (primarily Coinbase Prime) and stores the coins in secure cold wallets. The company does not trade these coins or hedge them. There is a simple instruction: buy and hold. This means that Strategy's Bitcoin holdings grow in only one direction. Unlike IBIT, which can be slashed by redemptions, Strategy's Bitcoin inventory grows with each funding round, regardless of market conditions.
According to Michael Saylor, in the week leading up to March 2026, Strategy acquired 40,332 Bitcoins, representing 3.0% of the total Bitcoin holdings. By mid-March 2026, the company would have accumulated 88,568 Bitcoins this year, currently holding 3.4%. These figures reflect an accumulation rate never before attempted by a publicly traded company.
The current gap is slight since BlackRock briefly surpassed Strategy's holdings in July 2025. As of March 16, 2026, BlackRock held 784,062 tokens, while Strategy held 761,068 tokens, a difference of 22,994 tokens.
At Strategy's recent rate of purchasing 22,337 contracts per week, the firm could almost close the entire gap in a week. At its current rate of approximately 2,881 contracts per day, it would take about 7 to 8 days to surpass BlackRock's current holdings if IBIT's inflows were to completely cease. This last condition is crucial: IBIT is not stagnant in Frankfurt; the fund is absorbing funds daily, meaning that while Strategy is narrowing the gap, its target is constantly moving upwards.
The race to the top remained a real hot topic in mid-March because the pace of MSTR's buying coincided perfectly with BlackRock's week-on-week growth. This contraction narrowed the gap faster than most analysts had anticipated. Bitcoin Magazine reported on March 17 that MSTR's stock price was heading towards $150, indicating that market participants were watching the race closely and betting on Strategy's logic.
The more fundamental issue isn't just who crosses the holding threshold first, but rather the impact of these two entities' continued purchases on the available supply in the open market. According to Checkonchain data, as of the end of February 2026, Bitcoin reserves held by national spot ETFs had surged by 1.29 million. Adding Strategy's 761,000, these institutional instruments have absorbed over 2 million Bitcoins. Trading platform inventories are declining. The supply shock driving long-term price increases is not a theoretical future event; it is happening now.
BlackRock operates one of the world's most liquid Bitcoin investment products. According to its own disclosures, IBIT is the largest Bitcoin trading platform product by trading volume since its inception. The fund manages over $55 billion in Bitcoin assets, providing investors with daily liquidity and charging an annual management fee of 0.25%. It is backed by a reputable institution managing over $14 trillion in assets.
For institutional investors, IBIT completely eliminates the operational complexities of Bitcoin custody. Bitcoin is held by Coinbase Custody Trust, a qualified custodian regulated under New York banking laws. Investors can access it through their existing accounts without managing wallets, private keys, or payment processes. This simplicity is of immense value to the funds, sovereign wealth funds, and family offices driving the inflow of IBIT.
BlackRock also benefits from structural isolation that Strategy lacks. Because IBIT holdings are linked to investor demand rather than the company's balance sheet, a collapse in investor sentiment inevitably leads to redemptions, not bankruptcy. BlackRock itself does not face RMB risk from a Bitcoin price crash. Its IBIT revenue and expenses will decrease, but its financial health remains isolated from the assets it holds.
Strategy's advantage over BlackRock lies in its ability to act upon market approval. IBIT's purchases depend on the sentiment of millions of investors, while Strategy can buy whenever it can secure funding.
VanEck's research uses the strategy's debt structure as its "silent engine." By early 2026, the firm held a significant amount of zero-interest convertible senior tranches. These instruments allowed the strategy to acquire nearly $100 million at zero cost, all of which was used to purchase Bitcoin. The firm also noted the 0.25% annual fee paid by IBIT shareholders, making MSTR a cheap alternative to the costly and expensive ETFs that offer attractive leverage for those seeking to capitalize on leveraged currencies.
Strategy's model also benefits from what analysts call the mNAV premium. When a company's market capitalization exceeds the market value of its Bitcoin holdings, the premium allows it to buy equity at a price that adds to the value of its Bitcoin holdings. This means that the value of Bitcoin added by each newly issued share exceeds a critical threshold. This flywheel can accumulate rapidly when the premium is high and optimism prevails. The company leveraged this dynamic to raise $25.3 billion in 2025, almost entirely through Bitcoin purchases.
Strategy's risks are real and well-documented. The company has total debt exceeding $8.2 billion, and its preferred stock obligations add significant annual cash requirements on top of that. STRC's preferred stock alone carries an annualized yield of 11.5%, and while the company has established a relief reserve of approximately 23 months, this reserve is not unlimited, and the burden increases with each new issuance.
mNAV compression is the most obvious risk indicator recently. Strategy's price-to-book ratio (mNAV) peaked at 3.4x in 2024, but had compressed to 1.20x by mid-March 2026. This compression is crucial because the premium is key to its equity financing appreciation. When the premium tends to 1.0x or below, its "financially-funded buy-crypto" flywheel will fail.
Furthermore, Strategy's bottom line warrants attention. Research suggests that if the price of Bitcoin continues to fall below approximately $40,000, its ability to obtain credit or refinance debt will face challenges; if it falls below approximately $20,000, the risk of forced asset sales will gradually increase. Strategy's rating has been downgraded to "non-investment grade (junk grade)" by major institutions, meaning its borrowing costs will be higher and it will lack access to investment-grade institutional funding.
BlackRock's risk is smaller in absolute terms, but it's not non-existent. IBIT inflows are driven by market sentiment, which is reversible. IBIT recorded a breakout week during the downturn in early 2026.
IBIT's structural risk stems from competitive pressure from other Bitcoin ETFs. Fidelity's FBTC, Grayscale's GBTC, and new entrants are all vying for the same funds. If those ahead offer ownership rates or attractive features, IBIT could lose market share. Furthermore, while highly unlikely, a regulatory reversal would likely have a greater impact on regulated products like IBIT than on direct players like Strategy.
BlackRock's race to strategy is more than just a story between two companies; it's uncovering the structural dynamics of the Bitcoin market.
Both entities are removing Bitcoin from circulation. Strategy's stockpiled coins in cold wallets either fail or are permanently withdrawn from the market. Bitcoin absorbed by IBIT is also typically held in custodial vaults for extended periods. Currently, US spot ETFs plus Strategy control approximately 2 million Bitcoins, representing nearly 10% of the total supply.
Bernstein analysts describe Strategy as a "central bank of last resort for Bitcoin." This is no exaggeration; it provides a foundation of institutional confidence to prevent disorderly market collapse. BlackRock's IBIT plays a different role: it is a gateway and entry point, translating institutional interest into actual demand.
IBIT is suitable for investors who want exposure to Bitcoin but don't want to deal with operational complexity, corporate risk, or leverage volatility. It offers a 1:1 relationship with the Bitcoin price (0.25% in towns) and can be held in retirement accounts, union portfolios, etc.
MSTR targets investors seeking leverage and willing to accept additional corporate risk in exchange for higher returns. MSTR's performance has historically significantly impacted IBIT during Bitcoin's sharp rallies due to its leveraged capital structure. However, it's important to note that in a prolonged bear market, MSTR's risk factors can amplify losses.
Direct holding eliminates annual fees and company risk, giving investors complete autonomy. For investors seeking a clean, uncomplicated experience and peace of mind with self-custody, this remains the cleanest structural option.
When Strategy's holdings surpass BlackRock's, it will be a significant symbolic milestone. This would mark the first time a corporate treasury has held more Bitcoin than the world's largest institutional ETF. Based on current trends, this could happen within the next few weeks.
But this public support has changed nothing of the fundamental dynamics. The celebrations are far from over. More importantly, in less than three years, institutional commitment to Bitcoin has reached the fastest pace of institutionalization among financial asset classes.
In addition, corporate Bitcoin financial models are becoming more decentralized. Japanese investment firm Metaplanet held over 10,000 Bitcoins in early 2026; Tesla held approximately 11,509; Bulk held approximately 8,883; and SpaceX held approximately 8,285.
The FASB's new value accounting, effective in 2025, eliminates the biggest financial hurdle for companies holding Bitcoin, allowing them to reflect fair value increases on a quarterly basis. Furthermore, the US political environment strongly supports this, with the SEC officially mapping Bitcoin as a digital commodity on March 17th, providing clear regulatory guidance.
BlackRock's competition with strategy boils down to two different answers to the same investment logic: Bitcoin supply is fixed, demand is growing, and the best time to accumulate is before the next cycle peaks.
BlackRock answered by distributing: it created a democratized product that involved hundreds of people.
Strategy answers with conviction: it uses every financial instrument to stop buying, without waiting for market sentiment.
Who holds the shares on the last day is less important than the combined long-term impact of these two entities on the market structure. This force is enormous and accelerating, and there is currently no basis for panic.


