When the Largest BTC Buyer Becomes a Seller, Who's Buying After MicroStrategy Sells 3,588 Bitcoin?

marsbitPubblicato 2026-07-08Pubblicato ultima volta 2026-07-08

Introduzione

MicroStrategy, once the largest corporate buyer of Bitcoin, sold 3,588 BTC for approximately $216 million to fund its preferred stock dividends, marking a significant shift from buyer to seller. This move occurred after its market-to-NAV premium vanished, breaking its "print stock to buy Bitcoin" financial model. A roundtable discussion featuring Austin Campbell, Ram Ahluwalia, and Chris Perkins analyzed the implications. They noted that MicroStrategy's dominance has become a narrative bottleneck for the broader crypto market, with some speculating that Bitcoin's price might only surge significantly after the company's influence wanes. The conversation expanded to examine the capital structure conflict between traditional equity and crypto tokens, arguing that most current tokens will fail as they don't fit neatly into existing debt/equity frameworks. A "stablecoin war" was identified as a major trend, with entities like Tether, Robinhood, and the OUSD alliance competing. Tether's decision to abandon the European MiCA market highlights strategic divergences. The panelists argued that bank-issued stablecoins could revolutionize global finance by allowing US banks to capture net interest margins from international transactions, potentially making JPMorgan the first trillion-dollar bank. They concluded that while capital is currently being siphoned by AI/semiconductors, markets will eventually refocus on fundamentals and cash flow, which could benefit cryptocurrencies with real...

Compiled & Translated by: Deep Tide TechFlow

Hosts / Guests: Austin Campbell, Zero Knowledge Group; Ram Ahluwalia, Lumida Wealth CEO; Chris Perkins, Franklin Crypto
Podcast Source: Bits + Bips (Under Unchained)
Original Title: MicroStrategy Sells Bitcoin Again to Cover Dividends
Release Date: July 7, 2026

Key Takeaways

The background for this Bits + Bips roundtable is MicroStrategy's second Bitcoin sale within a month—3,588 BTC, cashed out for approximately $216 million to pay preferred stock dividends. The three resident guests (and co-hosts) Austin Campbell, Ram Ahluwalia, and Chris Perkins deconstruct this structural turning point from their professional perspectives: when the largest BTC buyer becomes a routine seller, the mNAV premium disappears, preferred stocks fall below par, and the "print stock to buy Bitcoin" cycle breaks, what cards does MicroStrategy have left?

Austin opens with a hedge fund friend's remark—"Saylor holds 5% of Bitcoin, maybe it will only truly surge after he blows up"—highlighting the crypto market's brutal logic: when someone becomes the protagonist, their collapse might be the catalyst. Ram, from a macro trader's view, analyzes the dilemma of two choices: selling BTC destroys the narrative, issuing new shares dilutes MSTR. He also mentions hearing Saylor speak twice in London, with Saylor vigorously defending the preferred dividend to rebuild confidence. Chris, from an investment banking background, points out that with mNAV gone, the foundation of financial engineering has crumbled.

But the discussion goes far beyond MicroStrategy. The three delve into the capital structure issue of tokens vs. equity—why there are no successful "token + equity coexistence" cases, the Pokémon card analogy, and the judgment that 99% of tokens will eventually go to zero. The stablecoin war is another major topic: Tether abandoning the European MiCA market, the "utility problem" of stablecoins (Can you buy a coffee with a stablecoin?), the governance black hole of the OUSD 140-member alliance, Robinhood entering government money markets. The latter half extends to the strategic significance of bank stablecoins—Scott Bessent's "Eurodollar market repatriation" thesis, JPMorgan possibly becoming the first trillion-dollar market cap bank, non-US bank dollar deposit businesses facing obsolescence—as well as a valuation breakdown of the Securitize IPO. Finally, the three touch on the capital siphoning effect of AI/semiconductors and the return to crypto market fundamentals.

Selected Highlights

On MicroStrategy Selling BTC and the "Three-Body Problem"

  • "A friend in global macro told me it's hard to see the next wave of institutional adoption from pensions, sovereign funds, central banks with Saylor holding 5% of Bitcoin there. His exact words: 'Maybe the best thing is for that guy to blow up, then this thing will really take off.'"
  • "Whenever someone becomes the protagonist in crypto, their demise is imminent. MicroStrategy has been the protagonist for a while."
  • "Crypto narrative is now stuck on this MicroStrategy thing. MicroStrategy is not crypto, crypto is not MicroStrategy, but we're all stuck here. It's like when Bloomberg only talked about PIGS (Portugal, Italy, Greece, Spain) every day; the market eventually moves on."
  • "His actions today speak clearly—he's protecting the dividend, hoping it brings back confidence."

On mNAV Disappearing and Broken Financial Engineering

  • "They have two paths: issue common stock diluting MSTR, or sell Bitcoin suffering narrative damage."
  • "When the mNAV premium disappears, the 'print stock to buy Bitcoin' cycle breaks. You can't issue at will anymore because the market no longer gives you a premium."
  • "BTC actually rose during the week of the sale—Josh Mandel and Pete Rizzo noted it. It acted like a buyback. But the bears will say: premium is dead, BTC hasn't really rallied, it's now a seller."

On Token vs. Equity

  • "We already have Delaware corporate law and centuries of capital structure. You can slice cash flows into different layers of debt, and what's left is called equity. There isn't a third thing called a 'token' that fits into this stack."
  • "If you have common equity, a token likely needs to function like preferred equity or debt to have separate meaning. If it's just another form of equity, you might as well tokenize your equity."
  • "The Pokémon card is a good analogy—the company issuing the cards and the cards themselves are two different things. You can tokenize the product, not necessarily the equity."
  • "Looking ahead ten years, 90% of today's top 500 tokens will be gone. I think it will be 99%."
  • "Druckenmiller said during the dot-com bubble: 'I've already learned that lesson, I don't need to learn it again.'"

On the Stablecoin War

  • "Stablecoins are the new net interest income. Everyone wants that interest. Tether makes so much money doing the most basic product—how do I do the same?"
  • "The biggest challenge for all stablecoins right now is utility. You can transfer, but what can you actually *do* with a stablecoin? Can you buy a coffee with it?"
  • "Tether's stance is clear: this is soccer not American football, they won't play by Europe's rules. BNP Paribas can't not do business in France, but Tether can just walk away from a market."
  • "OUSD is a 'plan to have a plan'. 140 members with completely different economic goals, details not filled in. The hardest part—governance—is skipped, push the tech out first."

On Bank Stablecoins and Market Landscape

  • "Stablecoins are essentially a repatriation of the Eurodollar market. If JPMorgan or Bank of America issues a stablecoin, they can earn NIM from Thai merchants or Chinese suppliers."
  • "JPMorgan could become the first trillion-dollar market cap bank. They're over $900 billion now, spending $13-16 billion annually on tech."
  • "The biggest losers might be non-US banks offering dollar deposit accounts. If I can just buy stablecoins, why go through a local bank with awful FX and fees?"
  • "Securitize currently trades more like a call option—you're betting on a 10% chance it's worth $18 billion and a 90% chance it's worthless or acquired cheaply."
  • "Last quarter, every S&P 500 sector underperformed the index except semiconductors. Capital is being massively siphoned by AI."

"Maybe After He Blows Up, This Thing Will Truly Take Off"

Austin Campbell: Before we dive in, I want to share a conversation. I was chatting with a friend in global macro, one of the best traders I know. I asked him about Bitcoin. He said it's hard to see the next wave of institutional adoption—pensions, sovereign funds, central banks—happening with Saylor holding 5% of Bitcoin and having such a large personal presence. His exact words: "Maybe the best thing is for that guy to blow up, then this thing will really take off, and then others will pile in." Whenever someone becomes the protagonist in crypto, their demise is imminent. MicroStrategy has been the protagonist for a while. I can't help but think, in a way, that makes them an obstacle to Bitcoin's rise—and that creates its own problems.

National Security, Export Controls, and the Crypto Industry

Austin Campbell: Before the main topic, I want to raise a broader issue. Governments are now trying to control crypto from a new angle—not by stopping code publication, but by controlling who can use it. They want to use export control laws to restrict access to something already published under the First Amendment. It's essentially picking winners and losers without applicable laws or due process.

National security matters, of course, but we can't just say "national security" and close our eyes to why. We can't tell people "use stablecoins, use crypto rails to build your financial life" and then cut it off one day for national security or export controls. The crypto industry isn't angry enough about this; this is our fight.

MicroStrategy Sells Again: 3,588 BTC, $216 Million

Austin Campbell: Onto the main topic. MicroStrategy sold 3,588 Bitcoin for about $216 million cash. This is the largest sale to date, following a smaller sale of 32 BTC to cover preferred stock dividends. The question is clear: after the MSTR premium evaporated, will selling Bitcoin to cover dividends become routine? Is MicroStrategy still an accumulator, or has it become a routine seller?

First, the facts. They broke their years-long no-sell streak, first selling 32, then 3,588 a month later. As of July 5, MicroStrategy holds 843,775 Bitcoin, $2.55 billion in USD reserves, cost basis $75,700 per coin—well above the current ~$60k trading price. MSTR broke below $1 for the first time on June 27, to 99 cents, later recovering. STRC fell to 74.57 at its lowest, back around 90 before we started. Dividend rate increased 50bps to 12%. New authorization framework allows sales of up to $1.25 billion in Bitcoin, plus an STRC buyback plan.

Chris, you're from banking; Ram, you do a lot of investing. Saylor has shifted to selling from the balance sheet rather than issuing more MSTR stock. What does that tell you?

Two Choices: Sell Bitcoin or Dilute Stock

Ram Ahluwalia: Two paths. Issue common stock—dilutes MSTR, stock falls. Or sell Bitcoin—destroys the narrative. Last week we mentioned a potential short squeeze in MSTR, and we saw it in the news. More constructively, STRC and STRF started moving towards par over the past few days. They need to push back to par. If they do, they can breathe; if not, it's a problem. I still view this as a trading asset, susceptible to violent short squeezes, possibly in the middle of one now. I also want to see the date they sold Bitcoin vs. the announcement date—if BTC held up or even rose during the sale, that's quite encouraging.

I was in London last week, first at a Goldman event—packed, severely oversold, institutional build undeniable. Then a Robinhood event, their DeFi stuff was impressive. Before that, I heard Saylor speak twice. On stage, he was very focused on defending and protecting the preferred dividend, trying to convince the audience of his commitment to Bitcoin. He's trying to navigate this three-body problem.

Austin Campbell: This also cuts to the bull/bear divergence. Bulls will say: mNAV back to 1.09, STRC recovering, BTC rising during the sale week—Josh Mandel and Pete Rizzo noted it, it acted like a buyback. Bears will say: premium is dead, BTC hasn't really rallied, it's now a seller. And Roland and Peter Schiff pointed this out. My question: even if preferred recovers a lot and Saylor can sit tight for a while, if BTC doesn't rise, are we back at square one a year from now?

Ram Ahluwalia: My guess is, last week fast-money traders bought the dip on volume collapse. That's fast money, not long-term holders. They'll likely sell for profit.

Chris Perkins: From a banking perspective, when the mNAV premium disappears, the "print stock to buy Bitcoin" cycle breaks. You can't issue at will because the market no longer gives you a premium. So you have to work the asset side. Selling Bitcoin works accounting-wise—cost $75,700, market price low $60k, book loss but cash in hand. The problem is the action itself tells the market: you no longer unconditionally believe your own thesis.

"Three-Body Problem": MicroStrategy-Bitcoin-Crypto Narrative Lock

Chris Perkins: Unfortunately, we're stuck. Crypto narrative is now stuck on this MicroStrategy thing. MicroStrategy is not crypto, crypto is not MicroStrategy, but we're all stuck here, feeling like we need to digest this before moving forward. It reminds me of opening Bloomberg before, only talking about PIGS—Portugal, Italy, Greece, Spain—every single day, and eventually the market moved on.

I'm ready for us to turn the page. What encourages me somewhat is BTC showing resilience today. There are also positive tail factors—like Trump saying he likes crypto the same day the Trump account launched. I look forward to us focusing less on this three-body problem and getting back to fundamentals and details of other projects. Crypto is Bitcoin, Bitcoin is crypto, so MicroStrategy is crypto—I want to break that equation.

Another related debate emerging: does value flow to tokens or equity? You see it in private and public markets. Some dismissively say "all value is in equity, the rest is nonsense." I think it's more nuanced.

Token vs. Equity: No Third Capital

Austin Campbell: I think both can work, but the hard part is having both—unless you carefully define their rights. We already have Delaware corporate law and centuries of capital structure. You can slice cash flows into different layers of debt, and what's left after employees and creditors is called equity. There isn't a third thing called a 'token' that fits into this stack. You can make a token act like equity or debt, but making it a new concept alongside debt and equity is difficult.

If you have common equity, a token likely needs to function like preferred equity or debt to have separate meaning. If it's just another form of equity, you might as well tokenize your equity. You can also tokenize products, services, commodities—the Pokémon card is a good analogy. The company issuing cards and the cards themselves are two different things; you can tokenize the product without tokenizing equity.

Ram Ahluwalia: It's case-specific. From a decentralized tech perspective, it might differ—you can pop up frontends everywhere, governance logic for equity and tokens can be separate. In some projects, value clearly flows to tokens, equity becomes a shell. VCs' approach is to invest in both—take tokens and equity, capture value wherever it ends up. But honestly, tokens and equity coexisting with stable value—I can't think of a clear success story.

Chris Perkins: Some ask: will this whole token experiment, in hindsight, be a product of the COVID $3 trillion stimulus and zero-interest-rate era? We created twenty thousand tokens, didn't know what they were, thought they were governance and economic rights, and then reverted to traditional capitalism?

I don't think so. You can't deny real utility emerging: stablecoins near ATH, perpetuals market innovating, prediction markets growing, RWA and tokenized equity landing. Goldman's event was packed, Robinhood built a DeFi app store—12 partners, more coming—backed by Lloyd's insurance, abstracting risk in the backend. The market is maturing.

Austin Campbell: Looking ahead ten years, 90% of today's top 500 tokens will be gone. Is that failure or success?

Ram Ahluwalia: If you invested money, it's failure. I think not 90%, but 99% will go to zero. The lesson hasn't changed. Druckenmiller said during the dot-com bubble he already knew the lesson, didn't need to learn it again. These tokens have no value capture, founding teams get liquidity too early, no incentive to stay and build.

Stablecoin War: Tether, Robinhood, OUSD

Austin Campbell: This set of dynamics—Circle being queried by securities regulators, Robinhood entering government money markets, Tether's moves, the OUSD alliance—what's your take?

Chris Perkins: I saw this coming. Institutional profit-seeking is endless. If you're an exchange, you make money several ways: data, trading fees, net interest income. Stablecoins are the new net interest income. Everyone looks at Tether saying, these guys make so much money doing the most basic product—how do I do the same?

But the biggest challenge is utility. You can transfer, but what can you actually *do* with a stablecoin? Can you buy a coffee with it? It's still "hot potato"—I want to swap my stablecoin for yours, you hold mine, I earn interest. The stablecoin war has begun, will get worse before better. Will see consolidation. Look back at the CLARITY Act; banks should push it over the line.

Austin Campbell: Stablecoins are often discussed as a single product, but they're entirely different. Robinhood tries to attract deposits and deploy to DeFi—an investment and retail product strategy. Europe is more a regulated payments strategy. Tether's response is direct—they'll make USAT (US Tether), interested in the US economy, but Europe? "No bid." Tether calls it soccer not American football, they won't play by Europe's rules. They completely exited a market. You see them being pushed off some exchanges, Revolut delisting them. Tether's response: as expected. BNP Paribas can't not do business in France, but Tether can.

OUSD is a "plan to have a plan." A 140-member alliance with completely different economic goals, details not filled in. You say issuers keep economic benefits, but how tracked? Who minted the token? On which platform? How handled in DeFi? If based on who minted, can I immediately build a trading team to redeem others' OUSD and issue my own? The hardest part—governance—is skipped, push the tech out first.

Coinbase is also in OUSD, but smartly not putting all eggs in Circle's basket. If this were a serious business alliance requiring OUSD as a primary product, Coinbase likely wouldn't join. So they have a foot in both camps.

Ram Ahluwalia: "Move fast and break things" is a winning formula in tech. Elon Musk blew up countless rockets to reach SpaceX today. But "move fast and break things" with other people's money? Isn't that criminal? OUSD launched like a torpedo, but some partners faced backlash before even boarding—that's the bad side of tech culture colliding with finance culture.

Bank Stablecoins: Repatriation of the Eurodollar Market

Austin Campbell: Will banks issue stablecoins? I think so. In an ideal world, banks keep deposits for domestic use—loans exist. Deposit rates might rise, but repo rates fall, net funding cost flat. But you'd also want stablecoins, because deposits and stablecoins do different things. Like stocks aren't bonds. A client has a deposit, wants to transfer to an international recipient outside the banking system—use a stablecoin, not a deposit.

Ironically—Bank of America could issue a stablecoin, with reserves being BofA deposits. Then you truly get the best of both worlds. If CLARITY doesn't limit proceeds, they'd be thankful.

Ram Ahluwalia: They'll rush in, and partner with clients who have distribution. Look at Zelle's success—Zelle gave big banks an edge. The stablecoin framework similarly advantages big banks over regional banks. Regional banks haven't made a competitive response yet.

More importantly, the point Scott Bessent made several times: Stablecoins are essentially a repatriation of the Eurodollar market. If JPMorgan or Bank of America issues a stablecoin, they can now earn NIM from Thai merchants or Chinese suppliers. Of the US big four—JPMorgan, Wells Fargo, Citi, Bank of America—only Citi has a real international distribution network. The other three don't earn from their clients' clients. Stablecoins change that.

Chris Perkins: Don't underestimate JPMorgan. Their e-commerce business is substantial, with distribution channels connecting to these platforms. They can do what Meta attempted with Diem and Libra—but with their own framework, bringing multiple banks onboard. If Democrats take the House, they'll have a friendly ear in Elizabeth Warren. JPMorgan could become the first trillion-dollar market cap bank. They're over $900 billion now, spending $13-16 billion annually on tech. They're sensitive to disruption—saw what fractional trading, zero-commission trading did to their margins.

Banks already have "stablecoins"—called deposits. People give you dollars, you keep most interest, occasionally give some back. But the issue is, bank deposits only work within their network. Stablecoins let JPMorgan earn from clients' clients globally, not just their own clients.

Non-US Banks: The Biggest Losers

Austin Campbell: ZUSD is already a registered code—they're working on a stablecoin. But I'll be more direct: The biggest losers from dollar stablecoins might be non-US banks offering dollar deposit accounts. If I can open a dollar account via a local bank—usually awful FX, high fees—and now I can just buy stablecoins, that business is obsolete. And it's no longer just for ultra-high-net-worth clients.

If we're naming losers, dollar stablecoins are good for US big four, losers are probably like UBS.

Chris Perkins: Any product where "you give me dollars, I give you dollars back, but I keep the interest forever" is a good product.

Securitize IPO: Trading Like a Call Option

Austin Campbell: Talk about Securitize just going public. Q1 revenue up 39% YoY, but lost $7 million. Market cap $1.8 billion. Your thoughts?

Chris Perkins: Securitize currently trades more like a call option. You're not saying "I think it's worth $1.8 billion now," you're saying "I think there's a 10% chance it's worth $18 billion in the future and a 90% chance it's worthless or acquired cheaply or dies." The high volatility is evidence.

Ram Ahluwalia: Looking at IPO trends, IPOs over $1 billion almost always have a 50% drawdown in the first year. If you want to own Securitize, the right move might be to put in a lowball bid and wait. Circle is also near lows, but has real moats. Meanwhile Ripple got a MiCA license—Luxembourg, with passporting—but short-term doesn't help XRP or RLUSD much.

Market Landscape: AI Siphoning and Return to Fundamentals

Ram Ahluwalia: Last quarter, every S&P 500 sector underperformed the index except semiconductors. Capital is being massively siphoned by AI. But the past two weeks you see quality stocks bouncing back—Progressive, Allstate, Berkshire Hathaway, S&P Global, Moody's. World-class businesses on sale.

Austin Campbell: That should be good for crypto. Back to fundamentals. Things with revenue are rising. BTC back to $64K, Hyperliquid at 71.35. Everything eventually returns to fundamentals and cash flow.

Crypto di tendenza

Domande pertinenti

QWhat are the three main options MicroStrategy faces according to the podcast discussion, and what are the consequences of each?

AAccording to the discussion, MicroStrategy faces a two-part (or three-body problem) dilemma: 1) Issue more common stock (MSTR), which would dilute existing shareholders and cause the stock price to fall. 2) Sell Bitcoin from its balance sheet, which damages the core narrative that the company is a perpetual 'buyer' and holder of Bitcoin. The discussion also framed it as a 'three-body problem' where the fates of MicroStrategy, Bitcoin, and the broader crypto narrative are intertwined, creating a complex situation that the market is currently 'stuck' on.

QAccording to the panelists, what is the fundamental challenge with most crypto tokens in relation to traditional capital structures?

AThe panelists argue that there is no natural place for a 'token' as a third, distinct component within traditional capital structures defined by centuries of corporate law (like Delaware law). Capital stacks consist of debt (various levels) and equity (what's left after all obligations). A token can be designed to function *like* equity or debt (e.g., similar to preferred stock), but it cannot be a fundamentally new, parallel claim on cash flows. If it merely acts as another form of equity, it's simpler to just tokenize the existing equity. They suggest tokenizing products or services (like Pokémon cards) might be a more viable model than trying to insert tokens into corporate capital stacks.

QWhat is identified as the biggest challenge for stablecoins' widespread adoption, beyond their use for transfers?

AThe biggest challenge identified for stablecoins is **utility**. While they are excellent for transfers and settlements, the panelists question what they can actually be used for in everyday economic life. Specifically, Chris Perkins asks: 'Can you buy a cup of coffee with it?' The current environment is described as somewhat of a 'hot potato' game where entities try to get users to hold their stablecoin to earn interest, rather than solving real-world payment and purchase utility.

QHow do the panelists view the strategic implication of major US banks (like JPMorgan) issuing their own stablecoins?

AThe panelists see it as a major strategic opportunity for large US banks. They frame stablecoins as a 'repatriation of the Eurodollar market.' Banks like JPMorgan, which have vast domestic deposit bases, could issue stablecoins to capture the net interest margin (NIM) from transactions involving their clients' *clients* globally (e.g., a Thai merchant or Chinese supplier), business they currently cannot access directly. This would allow them to monetize a much broader network. They predict JPMorgan, in particular, could become the first trillion-dollar market cap bank by leveraging this and its existing technological investments.

QWhat is the panel's outlook for the vast majority of existing crypto tokens over the next decade?

AThe outlook is extremely pessimistic. Austin Campbell suggests 90% of the current top 500 tokens will disappear in the next ten years. Ram Ahluwalia goes further, stating he believes **99% will go to zero**. He compares the situation to the dot-com bubble, citing investor Stanley Druckenmiller's lesson that most ventures fail because they lack sustainable value capture mechanisms, and founders often take early liquidity, reducing their incentive to build long-term value.

Letture associate

Collateral Dollars: How Does a 'Second-Layer Dollar' Above Stablecoins Form?

Collateral Dollars: How Does a "Second Layer of Dollars" Form on Top of Stablecoins? Most assume stablecoins replicate Eurodollar functions, expanding the offshore dollar system. However, stablecoins primarily replace specific functions like operational dollar balances for settlement. They do not inherently create new dollar credit; they substitute existing claims. The key question is: what happens when financial intermediaries use stablecoins as collateral to create a new layer of dollar-denominated claims? This "collateral dollar" channel operates through secured lending, not direct money creation. A money-like event only occurs when a liability issued against the controlled stablecoin is funded, rolled over, or accepted at near-par value by another balance sheet. The discount (haircut) prices the gap between "effective control over the token" and "reliable convertibility to bank dollars." Elasticity stems not from the stablecoin itself but from the liability issued against it and the willingness of third-party balance sheets to treat that liability as a near-par asset. Compared to the traditional Eurodollar system—where elasticity originates from bank deposit creation—the stablecoin collateral chain is structurally different. Eurodollar deposits are credit-expansive from inception. Stablecoins are initially substitutive; elasticity emerges later if an intermediary's liability against them gains monetary acceptance. Stablecoins disrupt specific tiers of the offshore dollar system, mainly replacing operational settlement balances. They do not replace the need for full dollar balance-sheet capacity (credit lines, hedging, maturity transformation). For systemic impact, the second-layer liability must pass three tests: transferability, funding capacity, and monetary acceptance (being fundable or held at par by others). Pressure transmission also differs. In the Eurodollar system, stress moves up a hierarchy of claims. In a stablecoin collateral chain, the second-layer liability can lose its money-like status well before the underlying stablecoin faces a run, often triggered by haircut increases and margin calls that create a dynamic spiral of falling token prices and rising discounts. In conclusion, the "collateral dollar" is not the stablecoin itself. It is the second-layer liability issued against a controlled token balance that is willing to be funded and maintained at near-par value. Its existence depends on that liability surviving the leap from "token liquidity" to "bank dollar liquidity."

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Collateral Dollars: How Does a 'Second-Layer Dollar' Above Stablecoins Form?

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Lo sviluppo di questo token non presenta un team identificabile o un piano esplicito, cosa non rara nel settore delle meme coin. Invece, il progetto è emerso organicamente, con il suo progresso fortemente dipendente dall'entusiasmo e dalla partecipazione della sua comunità. Investitori di HarryPotterObamaSonic10Inu (ERC-20) Per quanto riguarda investimenti esterni e finanziamenti, HarryPotterObamaSonic10Inu rimane ambiguo. Il token non elenca alcuna fondazione di investimento conosciuta o un sostegno organizzativo significativo. Invece, la linfa vitale del progetto è la sua comunità di base, che informa la sua crescita e sostenibilità attraverso azioni collettive e coinvolgimento nello spazio crittografico. Come funziona HarryPotterObamaSonic10Inu (ERC-20)? In quanto meme coin, HarryPotterObamaSonic10Inu opera principalmente al di fuori delle strutture tradizionali che governano spesso il valore degli asset. Ci sono diversi aspetti distintivi che definiscono il funzionamento del progetto: Transazioni senza tasse: Senza costi fiscali sulle transazioni, gli utenti possono comprare e vendere liberamente il token senza preoccuparsi di costi nascosti. Coinvolgimento della comunità: Il progetto prospera sull'interazione della comunità, sfruttando le piattaforme social per creare entusiasmo e facilitare il coinvolgimento. Discussioni, condivisione di contenuti e coinvolgimento sono elementi cruciali che aiutano ad espandere la sua portata e a favorire la lealtà tra i sostenitori. Nessuna utilità pratica: Va notato che HarryPotterObamaSonic10Inu non offre un'utilità concreta all'interno dell'ecosistema finanziario. Piuttosto, è classificato come un token principalmente per attività di intrattenimento e comunitarie. Riferimento culturale: Il token incorpora astutamente elementi della cultura pop per attirare interesse, collegandosi a appassionati di meme e seguaci delle criptovalute. HarryPotterObamaSonic10Inu esemplifica come le meme coin operino in modo diverso rispetto ai progetti di criptovalute più tradizionali, entrando nel mercato come costrutti sociali innovativi piuttosto che come asset utilitari. Cronologia di HarryPotterObamaSonic10Inu (ERC-20) La storia di HarryPotterObamaSonic10Inu è segnata da diversi traguardi notevoli: Creazione: Il token è emerso da un meme virale, catturando l'immaginazione di molti appassionati di criptovalute. Le date di creazione specifiche non sono disponibili, sottolineando la sua crescita organica. Inserimento negli scambi: HarryPotterObamaSonic10Inu ha fatto il suo ingresso in vari scambi, consentendo un accesso e un trading più facili da parte della comunità. Iniziative di coinvolgimento della comunità: Attività in corso volte a migliorare l'interazione della comunità, comprese gare, campagne sui social media e generazione di contenuti da parte di fan e sostenitori. Piani di espansione futura: La tabella di marcia del progetto include il lancio di una collezione NFT, merchandising e un sito di eCommerce relativo ai suoi temi culturali, coinvolgendo ulteriormente la comunità e cercando di aggiungere più dimensioni al suo ecosistema. Punti chiave su HarryPotterObamaSonic10Inu (ERC-20) Natura guidata dalla comunità: Il progetto dà priorità al contributo collettivo e alla creatività, garantendo che il coinvolgimento degli utenti sia al centro del suo sviluppo. Classificazione come meme coin: Rappresenta l'epitome delle criptovalute basate sull'intrattenimento, distinguendosi dai veicoli d'investimento tradizionali. Nessuna affiliazione diretta con Bitcoin: Nonostante la somiglianza nel nome del ticker, HarryPotterObamaSonic10Inu è distintivo e non ha alcuna relazione con Bitcoin o altre criptovalute consolidate. Focus sulla collaborazione: HarryPotterObamaSonic10Inu è progettato per creare uno spazio per la collaborazione e la condivisione di storie tra i suoi detentori, fornendo un canale per la creatività e il legame comunitario. Prospettive future: L'ambizione di espandersi oltre il suo presupposto iniziale verso NFT e merchandising delinea un percorso per il progetto per potenzialmente entrare in strade più mainstream all'interno della cultura digitale. Poiché le meme coin continuano a catturare l'immaginazione della comunità crittografica, HarryPotterObamaSonic10Inu (ERC-20) si distingue per i suoi legami culturali e il suo approccio centrato sulla comunità. Anche se potrebbe non adattarsi al modello tipico di un token orientato all'utilità, la sua essenza risiede nella gioia e nella camaraderia coltivate tra i suoi sostenitori, evidenziando la natura in evoluzione delle criptovalute in un'epoca sempre più digitale. Con la continuazione dello sviluppo del progetto, sarà importante osservare come le dinamiche della comunità influenzano la sua traiettoria nel panorama in continuo cambiamento della tecnologia blockchain.

1.8k Totale visualizzazioniPubblicato il 2024.04.01Aggiornato il 2024.12.03

Cosa è BITCOIN

Come comprare BTC

Benvenuto in HTX.com! Abbiamo reso l'acquisto di Bitcoin (BTC) semplice e conveniente. Segui la nostra guida passo passo per intraprendere il tuo viaggio nel mondo delle criptovalute.Step 1: Crea il tuo Account HTXUsa la tua email o numero di telefono per registrarti il tuo account gratuito su HTX. Vivi un'esperienza facile e sblocca tutte le funzionalità,Crea il mio accountStep 2: Vai in Acquista crypto e seleziona il tuo metodo di pagamentoCarta di credito/debito: utilizza la tua Visa o Mastercard per acquistare immediatamente BitcoinBTC.Bilancio: Usa i fondi dal bilancio del tuo account HTX per fare trading senza problemi.Terze parti: abbiamo aggiunto metodi di pagamento molto utilizzati come Google Pay e Apple Pay per maggiore comodità.P2P: Fai trading direttamente con altri utenti HTX.Over-the-Counter (OTC): Offriamo servizi su misura e tassi di cambio competitivi per i trader.Step 3: Conserva Bitcoin (BTC)Dopo aver acquistato Bitcoin (BTC), conserva nel tuo account HTX. In alternativa, puoi inviare tramite trasferimento blockchain o scambiare per altre criptovalute.Step 4: Scambia Bitcoin (BTC)Scambia facilmente Bitcoin (BTC) nel mercato spot di HTX. Accedi al tuo account, seleziona la tua coppia di trading, esegui le tue operazioni e monitora in tempo reale. Offriamo un'esperienza user-friendly sia per chi ha appena iniziato che per i trader più esperti.

4.1k Totale visualizzazioniPubblicato il 2024.12.12Aggiornato il 2026.06.02

Come comprare BTC

Cosa è $BITCOIN

ORO DIGITALE ($BITCOIN): Un'Analisi Completa Introduzione all'ORO DIGITALE ($BITCOIN) L'ORO DIGITALE ($BITCOIN) è un progetto basato su blockchain che opera sulla rete Solana, con l'obiettivo di combinare le caratteristiche dei metalli preziosi tradizionali con l'innovazione delle tecnologie decentralizzate. Sebbene condivida un nome con Bitcoin, spesso definito “oro digitale” a causa della sua percezione come riserva di valore, l'ORO DIGITALE è un token separato progettato per creare un ecosistema unico all'interno del panorama Web3. Il suo obiettivo è posizionarsi come un asset digitale alternativo valido, anche se i dettagli riguardanti le sue applicazioni e funzionalità sono ancora in fase di sviluppo. Cos'è l'ORO DIGITALE ($BITCOIN)? L'ORO DIGITALE ($BITCOIN) è un token di criptovaluta esplicitamente progettato per l'uso sulla blockchain di Solana. A differenza di Bitcoin, che fornisce un ruolo di stoccaggio di valore ampiamente riconosciuto, questo token sembra concentrarsi su applicazioni e caratteristiche più ampie. Aspetti notevoli includono: Infrastruttura Blockchain: Il token è costruito sulla blockchain di Solana, nota per la sua capacità di gestire transazioni ad alta velocità e a basso costo. Dinamiche di Offerta: L'ORO DIGITALE ha un'offerta massima fissata a 100 quadrilioni di token (100P $BITCOIN), sebbene i dettagli riguardanti la sua offerta circolante siano attualmente non divulgati. Utilità: Sebbene le funzionalità precise non siano esplicitamente delineate, ci sono indicazioni che il token potrebbe essere utilizzato per varie applicazioni, potenzialmente coinvolgendo applicazioni decentralizzate (dApp) o strategie di tokenizzazione degli asset. Chi è il Creatore dell'ORO DIGITALE ($BITCOIN)? Attualmente, l'identità dei creatori e del team di sviluppo dietro l'ORO DIGITALE ($BITCOIN) rimane sconosciuta. Questa situazione è tipica tra molti progetti innovativi nel settore blockchain, in particolare quelli allineati con la finanza decentralizzata e i fenomeni delle meme coin. Sebbene tale anonimato possa favorire una cultura guidata dalla comunità, intensifica le preoccupazioni riguardo alla governance e alla responsabilità. Chi sono gli Investitori dell'ORO DIGITALE ($BITCOIN)? Le informazioni disponibili indicano che l'ORO DIGITALE ($BITCOIN) non ha alcun sostenitore istituzionale noto o investimenti di venture capital prominenti. Il progetto sembra operare su un modello peer-to-peer incentrato sul supporto e sull'adozione della comunità piuttosto che su percorsi di finanziamento tradizionali. La sua attività e liquidità si trovano principalmente su exchange decentralizzati (DEX), come PumpSwap, piuttosto che su piattaforme di trading centralizzate consolidate, evidenziando ulteriormente il suo approccio di base. Come Funziona l'ORO DIGITALE ($BITCOIN) Le meccaniche operative dell'ORO DIGITALE ($BITCOIN) possono essere elaborate in base al suo design blockchain e alle caratteristiche della rete: Meccanismo di Consenso: Sfruttando il proof-of-history (PoH) unico di Solana combinato con un modello di proof-of-stake (PoS), il progetto garantisce una validazione efficiente delle transazioni contribuendo all'alta performance della rete. Tokenomics: Sebbene meccanismi deflazionistici specifici non siano stati dettagliati ampiamente, l'ampia offerta massima di token implica che potrebbe soddisfare microtransazioni o casi d'uso di nicchia che devono ancora essere definiti. Interoperabilità: Esiste il potenziale per l'integrazione con l'ecosistema più ampio di Solana, inclusi vari piattaforme di finanza decentralizzata (DeFi). Tuttavia, i dettagli riguardanti integrazioni specifiche rimangono non specificati. Cronologia degli Eventi Chiave Ecco una cronologia che evidenzia traguardi significativi riguardanti l'ORO DIGITALE ($BITCOIN): 2023: Il dispiegamento iniziale del token avviene sulla blockchain di Solana, contrassegnato dal suo indirizzo di contratto. 2024: L'ORO DIGITALE guadagna visibilità poiché diventa disponibile per il trading su exchange decentralizzati come PumpSwap, consentendo agli utenti di scambiarlo contro SOL. 2025: Il progetto assiste a un'attività di trading sporadica e a un potenziale interesse per impegni guidati dalla comunità, sebbene non siano state documentate partnership significative o avanzamenti tecnici fino ad ora. Analisi Critica Punti di Forza Scalabilità: L'infrastruttura sottostante di Solana supporta alti volumi di transazioni, il che potrebbe migliorare l'utilità di $BITCOIN in vari scenari di transazione. Accessibilità: Il potenziale basso prezzo di trading per token potrebbe attrarre investitori al dettaglio, facilitando una partecipazione più ampia grazie a opportunità di proprietà frazionata. Rischi Mancanza di Trasparenza: L'assenza di sostenitori, sviluppatori o di un processo di audit pubblicamente noti potrebbe generare scetticismo riguardo alla sostenibilità e all'affidabilità del progetto. Volatilità del Mercato: L'attività di trading è fortemente dipendente dal comportamento speculativo, il che può comportare una significativa volatilità dei prezzi e incertezze per gli investitori. Conclusione L'ORO DIGITALE ($BITCOIN) emerge come un progetto intrigante ma ambiguo all'interno dell'evolvente ecosistema di Solana. Sebbene tenti di sfruttare la narrativa dell'“oro digitale”, la sua partenza dal ruolo consolidato di Bitcoin come riserva di valore sottolinea la necessità di una chiara differenziazione della sua utilità e struttura di governance. L'accettazione e l'adozione future dipenderanno probabilmente dall'affrontare l'attuale opacità e dalla definizione più esplicita delle sue strategie operative ed economiche. Nota: Questo rapporto comprende informazioni sintetizzate disponibili a ottobre 2023, e potrebbero essersi verificati sviluppi oltre il periodo di ricerca.

124 Totale visualizzazioniPubblicato il 2025.05.13Aggiornato il 2025.05.13

Cosa è $BITCOIN

Discussioni

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