Bitcoin

It very well could be that I'm ignorant to the utility of Bitcoin.

Bitcoin's perceived utility is privacy, security, and its inability to be devalued by government fiat - but it doesn't have any more inherent value than our own paper money. It is only perceived value shared by enough people that makes it valuable.

That is absolutely not the case with an entirely different category of crypto, called Utility Tokens. The entire financial system is currently being converted over to the "rails" these crypto are built around. There are only a handful of genuinely viable utility cryptos out there, with XRP, XLM, HBAR, Chainlink, and Solana being some of the top. Bitcoin somewhat proved the concept of crypto as digital, secure currency, but it's also old technology compared to most of the utility cryptos.

If it's of interest, part of what's necessary to understand all this is that any given "crypto" is actually two things: a distributed digital ledger that all the accounting and security is done around, and the token itself, which is the medium of exchange and the actual store of value on that ledger.

It's also critical to understand that we're not just talking money - you can "tokenize" anything, from house titles to stocks to gold to derivatives, putting it on that accounting ledger and using that ledger's token to exchange the value.

It's saves immense amounts of money and time, in avoiding the way currency exchanges and the accounting of all this is done right now.

Again, the entire financial system globally is converting over to these utilities, right now.

Here's an example:

When you buy stock shares, that gets recorded by several parties - buyer and seller, right? But what about there being a neutral third-party that it all gets reported to, to keep everyone safe and above-board? Both accounting for ownership, but also protecting ownership, so that someone can't steal your stocks by grabbing them out from under your bed or chest or wherever people used to keep stock shares 150 years ago.

One of those places in the US is called the DTCC. Think of it as the clearing house where all stocks and securities are stored, with literally manual ledgers being kept for ages as billions of shares are bought and sold by millions of parties.

That manual process is safe, but it's literally the only reason the stock markets are only open a few hours a day, and only 5 days a week. They need to keep track of all the paperwork. The volume of those few hours of trading equals 2-3x the amount of time needed in paperwork.

DTCC just adopted XLM to do this all instantly, a few weeks ago. After experimenting with it and a few others for almost 10 years. And for the near term, it's allowing everyone to go to 24/5 trading, and likely 24/7 trading eventually.

BTC will have value as long as people think it does. But these utility tokens are like buying chunks of the electrical grid or the railways - the entire financial world is getting its equivalent of the steam engine, internal combustion engine, and electrification, all at once.

The fact that most of these utility cryptos are a fixed supply, means that as that demand comes online over just the next couple of years, some of them are going to absolutely explode in value as institutions need them more. There are vast sums of time and money being saved and unlocked by these institutions converting to this system.
 
As a follow up to Roackand Sage’s token discussion, I just read today that all of Visa’s and 30 % of Mastercard’s transactions are executed with tokens for all of the reasons discussed above.

The 16 digit credit card will eventually be a thing of the past.
 
The latest on Saylor is interesting at the very least. His pledge to never sell has gone out the window. He just sold a bunch at prices appx 25% less than cost which would indicate its unsustainable. Scary this guy is the biggest Corp holder of Bitcoin.

Excerpts various sources;

Strategy is the largest corporate holder of bitcoin. The company has built its treasury through repeated stock and debt offerings. Its bitcoin sits at a cost basis near $63.9 billion, or roughly $75,700 a coin.

That model created a growing cash bill. The preferred securities pay dividends in cash, not bitcoin. Strategy’s software business does not generate enough to cover them.

Grayscale’s head of research, Zach Pandl, estimated the annual dividend load at $1.5 billion. When cash reserves run short, the company must raise more capital or sell coins.

The July sale dwarfs that first step. At 3,588 coins and $216 million, it is roughly a hundred times larger.

According to the company’s latest filing, Strategy sold 3,588 Bitcoin between June 29 and July 5. About 1,363 Bitcoin were sold during the first two days of the program at an average price around $59,256, with another 2,225 Bitcoin sold over the following five days at $60,773.

Strategy continues to accumulate even as it sells. After the May sale, the company bought 1,550 bitcoin for $101.3 million, nearly 50 times the size of the disposal. It made a $2 billion purchase in May and a $2.54 billion purchase in April.

The pattern shows a firm that funds dividends from its stack while adding to it through fresh capital raises.

That approach depends on market access. Strategy can issue new preferred shares and common stock to raise cash. When those markets cooperate, the company avoids large sales. When they tighten, bitcoin becomes the source of funds.
 
Well, at least it's on the right side of $60K now.

I still think the light at the end of the BTC tunnel is a train, but time will tell if Saylor is added to the list of Ponzi, Madoff and Say...


Eddie



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The latest on Saylor is interesting at the very least. His pledge to never sell has gone out the window. He just sold a bunch at prices appx 25% less than cost which would indicate its unsustainable. Scary this guy is the biggest Corp holder of Bitcoin.

Excerpts various sources;

Strategy is the largest corporate holder of bitcoin. The company has built its treasury through repeated stock and debt offerings. Its bitcoin sits at a cost basis near $63.9 billion, or roughly $75,700 a coin.

That model created a growing cash bill. The preferred securities pay dividends in cash, not bitcoin. Strategy’s software business does not generate enough to cover them.

Grayscale’s head of research, Zach Pandl, estimated the annual dividend load at $1.5 billion. When cash reserves run short, the company must raise more capital or sell coins.

The July sale dwarfs that first step. At 3,588 coins and $216 million, it is roughly a hundred times larger.

According to the company’s latest filing, Strategy sold 3,588 Bitcoin between June 29 and July 5. About 1,363 Bitcoin were sold during the first two days of the program at an average price around $59,256, with another 2,225 Bitcoin sold over the following five days at $60,773.

Strategy continues to accumulate even as it sells. After the May sale, the company bought 1,550 bitcoin for $101.3 million, nearly 50 times the size of the disposal. It made a $2 billion purchase in May and a $2.54 billion purchase in April.

The pattern shows a firm that funds dividends from its stack while adding to it through fresh capital raises.

That approach depends on market access. Strategy can issue new preferred shares and common stock to raise cash. When those markets cooperate, the company avoids large sales. When they tighten, bitcoin becomes the source of funds.

Michael Saylor never said that MicroStrategy (MSTR) would never sell Bitcoin. What he has consistently said is that you (as an individual) should never sell your BTC.As CEO of a publicly traded company, Saylor has a fiduciary responsibility to MSTR shareholders. Selling a small portion of their Bitcoin holdings was a prudent business decision that ultimately benefits MSTR, STRC, and STRK shareholders.Even after the sale, MicroStrategy still holds 843,775 BTC — more Bitcoin than any country, any individual, or any other public or private company in the world.I remain strongly bullish on both MSTR and Bitcoin. MicroStrategy is well-positioned to continue accumulating BTC going forward.

Disclosure:

1. This is not financial advice.
2. I have a significant position in MSTR and BTC ETF's.
 
A year ago financial media was prominently discussing BTC as a “store of value” to supplement fiat currencies. That discussion seems to have evaporated outside of BTC specific (cheerleading) threads and the BTC buzz seems to have translated to a trading vehicle.

With no intrinsic value inherent in btc, I suspect eddielasvegas will eventually be proven correct wrt the train being the light at the end of the tunnel.
 
A year ago financial media was prominently discussing BTC as a “store of value” to supplement fiat currencies. That discussion seems to have evaporated outside of BTC specific (cheerleading) threads and the BTC buzz seems to have translated to a trading vehicle.

With no intrinsic value inherent in btc, I suspect eddielasvegas will eventually be proven correct wrt the train being the light at the end of the tunnel.
BTC is trading at $63,838 and MSTR was $100.77 at the closing bell today July 6th 2026. I'll check back in on this post on July 6th 2027.
 
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