Replies (20)

There should be a case where the debt is problematic in a global downturn and bitcoin bear market. I just don’t know the number that it would be for sailor to be in trouble. And I am pretty sure that sailor know that number
Other than defined contribution plan retirement savings, I don’t see any need for anybody to own MSTR as a proxy for native asset exposure. Hell, I wouldn’t buy MSTR with YOUR money. Saylor sketches me out and always has. Digital energy? Digital GFY. I’d rather deploy defined contribution plan cash into FBIT if anything but I think holding the native asset is the best move but hey, that’s just me; a dumbass pleb. image
to the outside world, the perception is Bitcoin could go to zero so that risk is being mispriced. Perhaps it can and we are blind in the echo chamber. Of course if bitcoin just crashes hard (which of course it can and does all the time) the stock will get clobbered and he won't be able to get all these loans or dilute the shares as much
su-do's avatar
su-do 1 year ago
Perpetual motion machines do not exist. This is what you are missing.
Would be a silly move to be honest, the only benefit would be to get free Bitcoin, but then you drop the value of it in the process so no one wants it 🤣
It’s not a strong argument. It just makes my conviction in BTC & MSTR that much stronger. BTC in cold (never touch) MSTR in IRA - 🚀🚀
And bitcoin is the laws of physics finally kicking in with friction.
Fair comment, if you want to just do it. Agree too, can’t see Bitcoin going anywhere any time soon.
Have you observed the direction of that motion over the last 10 days or so? It might not feel that way if you had paid $500+/share and are now wondering what happened to 20% of it. The machine depends on continuously attracting new investment - which is easy when Bitcoin is ripping; not so much when it's not. As a comparison, new investments aren't required to increase Apple's share price because selling iPhones in itself generates the necessary capital to sell more iPhones.