MicroStrategyâs headline-grabbing bitcoin bet was a rational response to a macroeconomy in chaos, said Chief Executive Michael Saylor.
Appearing Tuesday at CoinDeskâs Bitcoin for Advisors virtual conference, Saylor shed new light on one of this yearâs biggest cryptocurrency stories: his software companyâs recent purchases of $425 million in bitcoin.Â
That surprise September move by Nasdaq-listed MicroStrategy marked one of the first â and largest â embraces of bitcoin by a mainstream corporation.
In a prerecorded fireside chat with CoinDesk Chief Content Officer Michael Casey, Saylor unpacked MicroStrategyâs bitcoin thought process, why it decided to eschew cash as a treasury reserve and whether gold can reclaim its spot as the marquee store of value in an increasingly digital world.
Saylorâs short answer: Gold canât. He thinks bitcoin has seized the lead.
Hoarding gold is âan antiquated approach to storing value,â he said. Bitcoin is âa million times better.â
In Saylorâs telling, MicroStrategyâs bitcoin journey began with the realization its $500 million cash pile was being eaten alive by government money printers. With recent emergency stimulus inflating the U.S. money supply faster than a Thanksgiving parade balloon, company executives felt compelled to move the treasury reserves away from the dollar.Â
âWhat weâre trying to do is preserve our treasury,â he said. âThe purchasing power of the cash is debasing rapidly.â
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For the last decade or so, the M2 money supply â the sum of physical cash, checking and savings accounts, certificates of deposit and money market funds â grew a modest 5.5%, Saylor noted. âA rational view of business treasury strategy would be, you had to get more than five and a half percent as your cost of capital in order to hold your purchasing power from 2011 to 2020,â he said.Â
But when COVID-19 hit this year, tanking the economy, the measures taken to contain the damage swelled M2 by 20%, raising the hurdles for corporate treasurers to preserve that purchasing power. âThe cost of capital of every cash treasury or every treasury in the world is now 20%,â Saylor said.
To be sure, U.S. inflation, as measured by the core Consumer Price Index (which excludes food and energy) declined briefly in 2020. But to Saylor, that measure is âirrelevant.â
âIf inflation only means a market basket of things with no food and energy in them, then almost by definition Iâve defined a metric which will never go up,â he said. Â
He pointed to cash holders in inflation-prone countries like Argentina, Brazil and Venezuela. They know all too well their purchasing power takes a hit when money supply expands.
âWhat if you live in Europe and the United States? It wasnât obvious. But it needs to become obvious,â Saylor said. âI think people will figure it out.â
Convinced the dollar was no place for MicroStrategyâs excess capital, Saylor said he and his executives began trawling around for a âtangibleâ asset alternative. âWe had to cycle through real estate, bonds, equity, precious metal, derivatives or crypto,â Saylor said.
Of that group, precious metals, particularly gold, has long stood as an enticing store of value, a scarce, safe-haven asset recognized around the world. Not to Saylor. For starters, he balked at the notion that gold is scarce. âGold is the least abundant of the commodities, but you can still produce gold,â he said.
But heâs also acutely concerned with what he describes as the clashing interests of gold miners and gold bugs. One is trying to capitalize on the market by mining replenishable supply while the other is hoping that access remains scarce, pushing prices up.
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âThe gold miners are the enemies of the gold holders,â said Saylor. âThe gold miners are trying to destroy your value, right? Theyâre not trying to help you.âÂ
He predicts an even bigger problem with the gold market: Investors fleeing to bitcoin. Even if they donât know it yet, Saylor thinks gold investors will eagerly dump the commodity for what he calls a superior store of value. Itâs not an if. Itâs a when.Â
âNot a good bet to bet against ingenuity and assume that people will be lazy and ignorant for the next decade, because itâs not likely,â Saylor said.
Citing one analystâs prediction that Federal Reserve action will keep equities moving upward regardless of the recent electionâs outcome, Saylor said the âmost aggressive monetary expansionâ is probably ahead.
Investors will therefore likely continue treating blue-chip juggernauts from Apple to Amazon as a new kind of safe haven. âTheyâre desperately grasping at straws,â Saylor said. All those assets are reliant on the fiat currency he sees as crumbling away.Â
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âEquities donât make a good store of value over the long term, unless the company can raise its prices faster than the rate of monetary expansion, or raise its gross margins faster than the rate of monetary expansion,â he said.Â
Saylor predicts monopolistic corporations will be the only ones positioned to achieve that kind of price pump. But the politicians wonât let those corporations exercise such power indefinitely, he said. So, back to square one.Â
âUltimately you have to find something which you canât print more of that doesnât have its fundamental underpinnings tied to a fiat currency, and the only thing that I can find right now is bitcoin,â he said.