MicroStrategy Executive Chairman Michael Saylor rejected claims that his firm’s massive cryptocurrency holdings pose a systemic risk to the market during a fireside chat at the BTCPrague conference on June 17, 2026. Speaking with Julian Liniger, Michael Saylor argued that MicroStrategy Inc.
(NASDAQ: MSTR) acts as a “shock absorber” for Bitcoin (BTC), providing essential liquidity and institutional support as the asset consolidates near the $60,000 level.
The remarks come at a sensitive time for the digital asset, which has seen its price halve from approximately $120,000 to $60,000 over the past eight months.
Michael Saylor dismissed critics who suggest the company’s leverage or potential liquidation could trigger a market collapse, instead positioning the firm as the primary force “keeping the market from crashing more.” To date, the company has acquired roughly 250,000 BTC, cementing its status as the world’s largest corporate holder of the asset.
Michael Saylor also took the opportunity to address recent scrutiny regarding a small sale of 32 BTC. He characterized the move as a rational component of the company’s capital markets business rather than a shift in long-term conviction.
According to the chairman, maintaining a dynamic balance between growth and risk is essential for the company’s preferred stock and credit offerings to remain viable in traditional finance circles.
Michael Saylor defends MicroStrategy Bitcoin strategy as market volatility persists
The current market environment has tested the resolve of many institutional players, but Michael Saylor remains steadfast in his “no second best” approach. He noted that Bitcoin dominance has climbed from 40% during the height of the previous speculative cycle to nearly 70% today.
This shift suggests a flight to quality as investors move away from experimental altcoins and toward the established security of the Bitcoin protocol.
During his sessions at BTCPrague, Michael Saylor emphasized that the current price action near $60,000 aligns with the 200-week moving average, a metric many analysts view as a proxy for the asset’s “book value.”
While short-term fluctuations generate headlines, he maintains that the market’s ultimate need is a $100 trillion digital capital solution, making the difference between $30,000 and $90,000 entries negligible in the long run.
The firm’s strategy relies on building a sophisticated financial stack on top of its “pure digital capital.” Michael Saylor outlined a five-layer “Digital Asset Stack” during an X post on June 16, 2026. This framework positions Bitcoin as the foundational layer for credit, money, and equity, allowing for more complex financial products without compromising the security of the underlying blockchain.
Addressing the systemic risk narrative and liquidity concerns
Critics frequently argue that MicroStrategy’s concentration of Bitcoin creates a single point of failure. Michael Saylor countered this by asking, “In what way are we a systemic risk?” He explained that the company’s willingness to engage in the credit markets actually provides a roadmap for other corporations to adopt Bitcoin as a treasury reserve asset.
If the company were to adopt an inflexible “never-sell” policy under all circumstances, Michael Saylor argued, it would break the very business model that allows it to continue buying. “If people believe that we were unwilling to sell the Bitcoin, then what follows is if you’re not willing to sell…
you can’t pay the dividend,” he explained. This pragmatism is what allows MicroStrategy to remain the most aggressive buyer in the world while shifting market structure continues to evolve.
The chairman clarified that his famous mantra about “not selling to the plebs” was directed at individual retail investors who might be shaken out of their positions prematurely. For a multi-billion dollar corporation, the sale of 32 BTC is a minor administrative adjustment within a much larger strategy of net accumulation and capital management.
The outlook for digital capital and global institutional adoption
Looking toward the end of 2026 and beyond, Michael Saylor sees Bitcoin as a winner-take-all protocol, comparing it to the global adoption of the English language or the TCP/IP internet standard. He believes the protocol’s lack of complex functionality—such as the staking and protocol-based yield found in networks like Ethereum—is actually its most valuable feature because it ensures long-term stability.
As market confidence gradually repairs following the recent drawdown, the role of institutional “shocks absorbers” will be critical. MicroStrategy’s perpetual preferred stock (STRC), which closed at $95.20 on Monday, is designed to trade near its $100 par value, effectively acting as a form of digital credit that sits above Bitcoin in the capital structure.
Michael Saylor remains convinced that the smartest capital in the world has already chosen its protocol. By acting as a bridge between the traditional NASDAQ equity markets and the 24/7 global liquidity of Bitcoin, MicroStrategy intends to continue its role as the primary engine of institutional adoption, regardless of short-term volatility or criticism from market skeptics.
