Peter Schiff blasts Strategy as fraud and challenges Saylor to debate

Source Cryptopolitan

On Sunday, renowned gold advocate and outspoken crypto critic Peter Schiff labeled the business model of Strategy Inc. (formerly MicroStrategy) a “fraud.” He said the company’s approach—relying on income-oriented funds buying high-yield preferred shares—is deeply flawed.

Schiff said the targets for raising these funds were advertised yields only and would never be actually delivered to the investor. After fund managers saw this, he warned, they would quickly sell off the preferred shares. 

He stated that doing so would limit the company’s ability to issue more debt, which he said would set off what he called a financial “death spiral.” Schiff’s take on this further escalated the situation by publicly challenging Strategy founder Michael Saylor, who publicly launched the move, in a live debate at Binance Blockchain Week in Dubai in December this year. 

He pitched the challenge as an opportunity to shed light on what he believes are systemic flaws in Strategy — a Bitcoin-centered corporate model. His comments come as Bitcoin has fallen below the $100,000 threshold and the broader cryptocurrency sector appears to be on the verge of collapse.

Meanwhile, gold — Schiff’s favored store of value — has remained above the critical psychological threshold of $4,000 per ounce. 

Saylor pushes forward as the crypto market battles volatility

The man who turned Strategy into the world’s largest Bitcoin treasury company, Michael Saylor, has been determined to stand firm on his own vision. 

In the face of analysts’ skepticism about the sustainability of the company’s preferred-share approach, Saylor maintains a commitment to long-term Bitcoin adoption and accumulation. Market data shows that Strategy’s multiple on net asset value (mNAV) — the amount investors are willing to pay to hold onto its underlying Bitcoin assets — dipped below 1 in November but has since rebounded to roughly 1.21. 

Although this is an improvement, analysts suggest that a healthy mNAV for a Bitcoin treasury company is typically two or more times the value of the assets. Strategy’s stock has struggled, however. Since July, it has dropped by more than 50 percent and trades near $199 — far below the levels seen earlier this year, before Bitcoin’s October flash crash wiped out tens of billions of dollars in crypto-market value. 

Saylor has stated that volatility is inevitable and that the company’s long-term thesis remains intact. He argued that building up Bitcoin during a downturn could reinforce the firm’s strategic position.

Meanwhile, gold — frequently cited as a rival to Bitcoin — is holding up. It is still trading at $4,085 per ounce, after reaching an all-time high of about $4,380 in October. 

Clash sends new signals to investors

The comments by Schiff have drawn fresh attention to the corporate Bitcoin treasury model, especially for firms that use complex financing structures, such as preferred stock. If Schiff is right to predict that preferred-share demand will eventually collapse, Strategy could become increasingly squeezed on its balance sheet and its capacity to scale up its Bitcoin holdings. 

Saylor, meanwhile, is convinced that whatever path Bitcoin takes in the long term will vindicate Strategy’s strategy and outpace the market’s short-term noise. The public debate challenge puts the stage up for a high-profile duel between two of the loudest voices on the opposing sides of the gold-versus-Bitcoin divide. 

For investors, the exchange highlights a larger tension between legacy safe-haven assets and the emerging world of digital stores of value. The coming months — and the proposed debate — may be instrumental in shaping sentiment around each.

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