Bitcoin bought by corporate giants should not be feared — Michael Saylor
During a recent podcast interview, Michael Saylor explained that Bitcoin being bought and custodied by corporations should not be feared, outlining three main reasons driving the need for custodians.
Archive context
Older archive item. Useful for background and entity history, but not a fresh market-moving signal.
During a recent podcast interview, Michael Saylor explained that Bitcoin being bought and custodied by corporations should not be feared, outlining three main reasons driving the need for custodians.
Why this matters
This bitcoin story adds another data point to the current market tape and is useful when read alongside nearby source coverage.
Original source
Read on CointelegraphRelated market context
Strategy bought time but Bitcoin’s next cycle may need buyers beyond Saylor
Michael Saylor’s Strategy has calmed the immediate panic around its preferred-stock complex, but the company’s latest overhaul poi...
Michael Saylor’s Orange Dot Bitcoin Chart Returns as Traders Watch for Strategy’s Next Buy
Michael Saylor posted a fresh orange dot bitcoin chart Sunday, putting attention back on whether Strategy will announce another bi...
Bitcoin Price Prediction: Saylor’s Strategy is a Risk to Bitcoin, According to JP Morgan
JPMorgan has flagged a structural risk most Bitcoin price prediction bulls haven’t priced in: the same entity driving the most agg...
JP Morgan Warns of New Bitcoin Sell Pressure From Strategy While XRP AI Transactions Approach 1 Million
Although the two developments are unrelated, they illustrate how Bitcoin’s institutional investment narrative and XRP’s expanding...
Saylor Takes ‘Digital Credit’ Pitch to Goldman Sachs as Strategy’s Bitcoin-Backed Lending Tops $11 Billion
Michael Saylor used a Goldman Sachs digital-assets conference in London to argue that bitcoin’s next phase is “digital credit,” a...
The failed promise of athlete tokenization, explained through Riyad Mahrez’s free agency
Athlete tokenization's failure highlights the need for genuine economic rights and regulatory clarity to attract serious investmen...