Listen carefully. Michael Saylor has deployed tens of billions of dollars into $BTC over the past 5 years. At current prices—and adjusted for inflation—those holdings are significantly underwater. That alone isn’t the real risk. The real problem is how a large portion of that Bitcoin was acquired: ➡️ Debt. Leverage. Convertibles. Ongoing obligations. Debt doesn’t care about ideology. It doesn’t care about “long-term conviction.” It has to be serviced. When leverage meets volatility, things can unravel fast. There’s another issue most people ignore: concentration. Bitcoin was designed to reduce central points of failure. But when massive amounts of BTC are controlled—directly or indirectly—by a single entity using borrowed money, systemic fragility increases. This isn’t anti-Bitcoin. This is risk analysis. I warned about this more than a month ago. I’m watching it closely, and I’ll continue to update publicly. And when I start buying Bitcoin again, I won’t hide it. I’ll say it openly, here. Ignoring leverage, debt cycles, and concentration risk has never ended well in financial history. A lot of people will wish they had paid attention to these warnings.