Close Menu
    What's Hot

    Vitalik Buterin admits his biggest design mistake since 2017

    January 27, 2026

    New post-quantum signatures are 40x larger, threatening to crush network throughput and user costs

    January 27, 2026

    Fundstrat’s Tom Lee sees Bitcoin and Ethereum price breakout after precious metals peak

    January 27, 2026
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    • Home
    • About Us
    • Get In Touch
    • Privacy Policy
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Digicoinvision.com
    • Altcoin
    • Bitcoin
    • Blockchain
    • Crypto News
    • Ethereum
    Digicoinvision.com
    Home»Bitcoin»A Bitcoiner’s Dilemma In The Age Of Rampant Speculation
    A Bitcoiner’s Dilemma In The Age Of Rampant Speculation
    Bitcoin

    A Bitcoiner’s Dilemma In The Age Of Rampant Speculation

    DigicoinvisionBy DigicoinvisionAugust 15, 2025No Comments28 Mins Read
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    Strategy, Michael Saylor and MSTR have taken over Wall Street. To many people’s chagrin, the suitcoiners and corporates are here: Bitcoin held by corporations in the form of bitcoin treasury companies is hypnotic to look at. It has captured more or less everyone’s mind — mine, included.

    It’s the latest fad on the world’s capital markets, celebrated by a narrow sway of financially savvy Bitcoiners and insiders, yet hated by tradfi people who can’t for the love of humanity understand why anybody, let alone a company, would want bitcoin at all. Every odd Bitcoin podcaster has joined one or more bitcoin treasury companies as investors or advisors… or, to put their role more bluntly: as glorified marketers posing as retail-delivery systems.

    Over the last few months, I’ve spent hundreds of hours investigating bitcoin treasury companies. I’ve read reports and explainers, bull-ish puff pieces and in-the-weeds descriptions. I’ve thought deeply about the financial-market logic behind them. I’ve edited excellent articles pushing the rationale for treasury companies, and overseen equally superb arguments against them. 

    In some small ways, I’ve even fallen prey to them; I’m not as aggressively opposed to them as I gave voice to in the June 2025 article (“Are Bitcoin Treasury Companies Ponzi Schemes?”) that was, incidentally, shoved before Michael Saylor on Fox Business last week. 

    Here’s what I’ve learned from all of this. 

    What’s a Sane, Normal, Regular Bitcoiner To Do? 

    The easiest way to go about bitcoin treasuries and financialized bitcoin is to simply ignore everything. Before Enlightenment: chop wood, hodl self-custody bitcoin; after Enlightenment: chop wood, hodl self-custody bitcoin. Only time will tell if these financial vehicles, loaded with corporate-wrapped bitcoin and soft-spoken CEOs, will succeed or spectacularly blow up. 

    But in topics of money and finance (and economics more broadly), there is usually no nice, neutral choice, no non-action; my money and savings must go somewhere, my attention and labor be focused on something. New bitcoin treasury companies are launched weekly; aggressive fund raises or purchases are announced daily. Being in this space, having an opinion becomes inevitable; having a good, well-informed one seems almost a moral imperative.  

    Having spent years diving into the weeds of monetary economics, financial history and now the wild financial frontier of Bitcoin, the intellectual path to tread here is quite narrow. One side promises a fast-track to the hyperbitcoinized future we all envision, with corporate charters merely amplifying my sats on the way; the other, a cesspool of financial engineering and a hive of speculative mania quickly lining up Bitcoiners to have their fiat contributions repurposed as bitcoin yield. 

    $MSTR trades at a premium to Bitcoin NAV due to Credit Amplification, an Options Advantage, Passive Flows, and superior Institutional Access that equity and credit instruments provide compared to commodities. pic.twitter.com/AYQlytS4ID

    — Michael Saylor (@saylor) August 13, 2025