#UNISurges20% Saylor just said Strategy must be able to sell Bitcoin – and here's why that's actually bullish for $BTC.
For years, the narrative was "never sell." But with new FASB fair-value accounting rules, holding 200,000+ BTC means Strategy needs flexibility to manage their balance sheet – not because they want to dump, but because they have to adapt.
If they sell, it'll be OTC or in tiny batches. 1% of their stack is ~2,000 BTC – around $60M. That's nothing in daily Bitcoin volume. The market won't even blink.
The real takeaway? This makes Strategy a more sophisticated treasury company, not less. Saylor is playing the long game – positioning for institutional adoption, not a quick exit.
Saylor just said Strategy must be able to sell Bitcoin – and here's why that's actually bullish for $BTC.
For years, the narrative was "never sell." But with new FASB fair-value accounting rules, holding 200,000+ BTC means Strategy needs flexibility to manage their balance sheet – not because they want to dump, but because they have to adapt.
If they sell, it'll be OTC or in tiny batches. 1% of their stack is ~2,000 BTC – around $60M. That's nothing in daily Bitcoin volume. The market won't even blink.
The real takeaway? This makes Strategy a more sophisticated treasury company, not less. Saylor is playing the long game – positioning for institutional adoption, not a quick exit.
Saylor just said Strategy must be able to sell Bitcoin – and here's why that's actually bullish for $BTC.
For years, the narrative was "never sell." But with new FASB fair-value accounting rules, holding 200,000+ BTC means Strategy needs flexibility to manage their balance sheet – not because they want to dump, but because they have to adapt.
If they sell, it'll be OTC or in tiny batches. 1% of their stack is ~2,000 BTC – around $60M. That's nothing in daily Bitcoin volume. The market won't even blink.
The real takeaway? This makes Strategy a more sophisticated treasury company, not less. Saylor is playing the long game – positioning for institutional adoption, not a quick exit.
Saylor just said Strategy must be able to sell Bitcoin – and here's why that's actually bullish for $BTC.
For years, the narrative was "never sell." But with new FASB fair-value accounting rules, holding 200,000+ BTC means Strategy needs flexibility to manage their balance sheet – not because they want to dump, but because they have to adapt.
If they sell, it'll be OTC or in tiny batches. 1% of their stack is ~2,000 BTC – around $60M. That's nothing in daily Bitcoin volume. The market won't even blink.
The real takeaway? This makes Strategy a more sophisticated treasury company, not less. Saylor is playing the long game – positioning for institutional adoption, not a quick exit.
Saylor just said Strategy must be able to sell Bitcoin – and here's why that's actually bullish for $BTC.
For years, the narrative was "never sell." But with new FASB fair-value accounting rules, holding 200,000+ BTC means Strategy needs flexibility to manage their balance sheet – not because they want to dump, but because they have to adapt.
If they sell, it'll be OTC or in tiny batches. 1% of their stack is ~2,000 BTC – around $60M. That's nothing in daily Bitcoin volume. The market won't even blink.
The real takeaway? This makes Strategy a more sophisticated treasury company, not less. Saylor is playing the long game – positioning for institutional adoption, not a quick exit.
Saylor just said Strategy must be able to sell Bitcoin – and here's why that's actually bullish for $BTC.
For years, the narrative was "never sell." But with new FASB fair-value accounting rules, holding 200,000+ BTC means Strategy needs flexibility to manage their balance sheet – not because they want to dump, but because they have to adapt.
If they sell, it'll be OTC or in tiny batches. 1% of their stack is ~2,000 BTC – around $60M. That's nothing in daily Bitcoin volume. The market won't even blink.
The real takeaway? This makes Strategy a more sophisticated treasury company, not less. Saylor is playing the long game – positioning for institutional adoption, not a quick exit.
Saylor just said Strategy must be able to sell Bitcoin – and here's why that's actually bullish for $BTC.
For years, the narrative was "never sell." But with new FASB fair-value accounting rules, holding 200,000+ BTC means Strategy needs flexibility to manage their balance sheet – not because they want to dump, but because they have to adapt.
If they sell, it'll be OTC or in tiny batches. 1% of their stack is ~2,000 BTC – around $60M. That's nothing in daily Bitcoin volume. The market won't even blink.
The real takeaway? This makes Strategy a more sophisticated treasury company, not less. Saylor is playing the long game – positioning for institutional adoption, not a quick exit.
#SECChairAtkinsReformsIPOAccess Saylor just admitted Strategy must be able to sell Bitcoin. Let's unpack what that really means for $BTC.
1/ First, this isn't a change of heart – it's a change of accounting. The new FASB fair-value rule forces public companies to mark BTC to market. That means Strategy needs the option to sell to avoid balance sheet volatility.
2/ Second, they hold over 200,000 BTC. If they sell even 1%, that's 2,000 BTC – roughly $60M at current prices. That's a drop in the bucket compared to daily trading volume. No crash coming.
3/ Third, and most importantly – this makes Strategy more attractive to mainstream investors who want active management, not just a piggy bank.
My take: Saylor is playing chess, not checkers. He's building a Bitcoin treasury company for the next decade.
UNIRises22%To$3.28Michael Saylor just dropped a bombshell. Saylor says Strategy must be able to sell Bitcoin – and that's actually a smart move, not a red flag. 🧠
Under the new FASB accounting rules, holding $BTC at fair value means they need flexibility. If they sell, it won't be a panic dump – it'll be strategic treasury management. With 200k+ BTC, even a small OTC sale wouldn't move the market much.
This tells me Saylor is thinking long-term institutional adoption, not short-term exit.
#Michael Saylor just dropped a bombshell: Strategy (MicroStrategy) must be able to sell Bitcoin. But what does that actually mean for $BTC?
For years, Saylor was the ultimate HODLer — "never sell" was his mantra. Now, shifting to a "fair value" accounting model under new FASB rules, he acknowledges that selling may be necessary for corporate treasury management or strategic acquisitions.