Imagine you're at a playground with a secret cookie club. Every week, Saylor announces, "We got 20,000 cookies!" But instead of running into the busy playground to grab cookies where everyone sees and rushes after them, he secretly arranges with a few friends in a quiet corner (that’s like an OTC deal).
So, who’s selling? It's just some club members who already had cookies and decided to trade quietly. Because these trades happen away from the noisy, public market (the playground's main area), the cookie count on the big board (the charts) doesn’t suddenly jump—even if they’re trading a lot.
In short, Saylor's team is likely buying cookies in secret deals to avoid drawing attention, which keeps the public prices calm.