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Ripple CEO: Michael Saylor’s Bitcoin Strategy Has Hurt Crypto Market

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The bitcoin accumulation playbook built by Michael Saylor is facing one of its sharpest public rebukes from within the crypto industry. Ripple CEO Brad Garlinghouse has directly criticized the financial engineering that Strategy, formerly MicroStrategy, uses to fund its massive bitcoin positions, claiming it has damaged broader market sentiment.

According to the report , Garlinghouse pointed specifically to the performance of Strategy’s STRC preferred shares. The perpetual preferred stock carries an 11.5% cumulative dividend and a par value of $100. It was designed to raise additional capital for continued bitcoin purchases. Yet the shares are currently trading about 25% below that par level, suggesting investors are pricing in significant risk.

The Mechanics of the STRC Discount

STRC is not a conventional equity raise. It effectively created a leveraged instrument tied to Strategy’s bitcoin holdings, rewarding holders with a high fixed dividend while the company used the proceeds to enlarge its bitcoin treasury. The fact that the market has repriced the instrument to a deep discount signals that the broader investment community may doubt whether the underlying bitcoin position can sustainably support the promised yield without future dilution or forced asset sales.

Garlinghouse’s critique centers on the idea that long‑term digital asset value should be driven by real utility rather than by a cycle of debt‑fueled bitcoin accumulation. He remains bullish on bitcoin itself, but the structure he is attacking matters because it imports corporate credit risk into an asset class that many holders prefer to treat as independent of traditional finance.

Utility Versus Leverage

The Ripple executive’s position comes from a fundamentally different thesis. Ripple operates XRP as a token intended for payments and financial settlement, and Garlinghouse has long argued that utility is the only durable foundation for price. From that vantage point, using preferred equity to buy bitcoin does not add utility — it merely layers leverage onto a volatile base. While institutional flows have increasingly moved toward tokenized real‑world assets, as seen in a recent tokenization roundup , Saylor’s strategy doubles down on a single‑asset concentration model that offers no productive yield outside price appreciation.

This divide has implications for how the market understands institutional adoption. Corporate treasuries now hold billions in bitcoin, but the method of acquisition matters. When a company issues preferred stock to buy bitcoin, it connects the asset’s liquidity to its own corporate balance sheet stress. Garlinghouse seems to be warning that the market is beginning to price that connection, and the STRC discount is a visible symptom.

Market Implications and Open Questions

What remains uncertain is how far this discount can widen before it forces a reaction. If bitcoin enters a sustained downtrend, STRC holders may face the risk of missed dividends or forced conversions, and a potential unwind of Strategy’s position could add selling pressure across crypto markets. Moreover, if other corporate treasuries begin to reassess their own leverage, the sentiment shift could ripple beyond Strategy. The episode also lands at a moment when regulators are scrutinizing how corporations expose themselves to digital assets. The banking industry is actively pushing back against a landmark crypto market structure bill , and fresh rules could reshape the way companies finance or report their crypto holdings.

At the same time, the industry continues to debate what metric best measures real value creation. Some point to networks with deep developer engagement, as tracked in rankings of top blockchains by developer activity , rather than to the size of a corporate balance sheet. The contrast between utility‑driven projects and debt‑fueled accumulation is unlikely to fade soon, and Garlinghouse’s comments ensure that contrast stays in the spotlight.

Strategy’s bitcoin bet remains one of the most visible institutional positions in the market. Garlinghouse’s criticism does not invalidate the store‑of‑value argument, but it does put pressure on the structure that supports it. The STRC discount, the uncertain regulatory path, and the growing diversity of institutional approaches to digital assets all suggest that the market is entering a phase where how you hold bitcoin might matter just as much as whether you hold it at all.

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