Michael Saylor’s career has long been defined by high-stakes financial bets—first during the dot-com era, when MicroStrategy’s stock collapse wiped out billions of dollars of shareholder value in a single day, and now through Strategy’s latest phase as the most prominent corporate Bitcoin holder on Wall Street. Strategy (formerly MicroStrategy) currently holds 843,775 Bitcoin, according to the company’s public disclosures, and has become an influential reference point for firms experimenting with Bitcoin as a treasury reserve asset. But the debate surrounding Saylor’s model has shifted: attention is moving from simply whether to hold Bitcoin to how the position is funded, managed, and potentially reduced. Key takeaways Strategy has evolved from an accumulation-first posture into an active treasury framework that can involve selling Bitcoin to support other capital needs. Recent disclosures include the sale of 3,588 Bitcoin, described as the largest disposal since Strategy made Bitc...
The US Senate is nearing a vote on the Digital Asset Market Clarity (CLARITY) Act, a market-structure bill backed by Republicans that would set new rules for digital-asset activity. But a vocal bloc of Senate Democrats and civil-society groups says the legislation is incomplete, arguing it fails to address ethics concerns tied to President Donald Trump’s financial relationships with parts of the crypto industry. At a press conference on Tuesday, Senators Chris Murphy, Jeff Merkley, and Chris Van Hollen—along with representatives for Americans for Financial Reform and Indivisible and actor Ben McKenzie—criticized the bill for what they characterized as “Trump’s crypto corruption.” The lawmakers argued that passing a new regulatory framework without curbing potential conflicts would effectively “protect” the President’s ability to influence the sector. Key takeaways Democratic senators Murphy, Merkley, and Van Hollen signaled they will not back the CLARITY Act unless ethics safeguards ...