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Saylor's Thesis on Bitcoin's Native Yield Versus Institutional Market Data - Crypto Economy
Michael Saylor has presented his thesis on the structure of digital assets. His statement indicates that Bitcoin does not require a native yield similar to the one offered by Ethereum. This claim is not an isolated theoretical observation; it represents the operational basis of Strategy. When you review the available data, you find a contradiction that requires attention. Bitcoin’s market capitalization stands at $1.31 trillion.
This figure is six times larger than Ethereum’s $216 billion. However, when you examine capital flows into ETFs during the second quarter of 2025, you observe an opposing trend. Ethereum ETFs attracted $9.4 billion. Bitcoin ETFs attracted $552 million in the same period
This difference in flows leads you to question whether Saylor’s position reflects a market reality or responds to a necessity of his own business model.
To understand his argument, you must break down the framework called the “Digital Asset Stack.“ Saylor proposes five layers. The first layer is Bitcoin, defined as pure digital capital. The subsequent layers are digital credit, digital money, digital yield, and equity capital. In this structure, Bitcoin should not issue rewards or modify its supply
Its function is limited to being a reserve asset with a fixed issuance and immutable characteristics. Price volatility, according to Saylor, does not represent a design flaw but rather a property of global capital. Yields, under this logic, are generated in the upper layers through financial products
They are not obtained through modifications to the base protocol. Saylor uses as an example Strategy’s perpetual preferred stock STRC, which offers a yield of 11.5% and trades near its $100 par value.
The issue with this thesis becomes visible when you compare it against the actual yield of Ethereum. The staking yield on Ethereum currently ranges between 2.8% and 4.2% annually. This percentage has decreased from the 5% recorded in 2023, but it remains within a positive range. For an institutional investor managing a corporate treasury, the operational difference is clear.
Holding ETH generates income without requiring the sale of the underlying asset. Bitcoin does not offer this option. If a company holds BTC on its balance sheet and needs liquidity for operating expenses, it must sell a portion of its holdings or resort to loans using BTC as collateral. Both options introduce interest costs and counterparty risk.
The ETF flow data becomes relevant at this point
The inflow of $9.4 billion into Ethereum ETFs during the second quarter of 2025, compared to $552 million into Bitcoin ETFs, suggests that the institutional market assigns value to native yield. This is not a temporary preference; it corresponds to an allocation decision based on the capacity to generate cash flow.
When comparing both networks, Bitcoin maintains an advantage in market capitalization and in the number of companies that include it in treasury (134 companies versus 73 for Ethereum). However, the gap in recent inflow figures indicates that the reserve of value function, by itself, does not capture all current institutional demand.
Saylor responds to this point with his own internal metric
Strategy reports a “BTC Yield” of 23.2% in 2025 and has set a target of 30% for the current year. You must analyze this figure precisely. This yield does not originate from the Bitcoin protocol. It corresponds to a measure of the growth of BTC holdings relative to share dilution and capital deployment by Strategy. It is a yield for Strategy shareholders, not for individual Bitcoin holders. If you buy BTC on an exchange and store them in a wallet without participating in external services, your yield is zero.
The paradox in Saylor’s position materialized in May 2026. Strategy sold $2.5 million in BTC. This operation was the company’s first sale since December 2022. This transaction exposed a practical limitation of his model. Even with a theoretical high “BTC Yield,” the company needed to liquidate a portion of its holdings to meet operational obligations or restructure its balance sheet

In contrast, a company with a treasury in ETH could resort to staking to cover current expenses without reducing its exposure to the asset. This practical case questions Saylor’s argument, because it demonstrates that the ability to generate income without selling the asset has a quantifiable financial value in the daily operations of a company.
Saylor proposes that yield be generated in upper layers through digital credit and digital money products. These financial products built on Bitcoin require intermediaries, legal contracts, and exposure to credit risk. Native staking on Ethereum occurs within the protocol.
Validators operate in a decentralized manner, and the process does not require a centralized counterparty that can default. For an investor with sensitivity to counterparty risk, this difference is decisive. Depositing BTC in a credit fund is not equivalent to locking ETH in a staking smart contract.
Market capitalization remains favorable to Bitcoin by a wide margin
This trend may continue in the short and medium term. The Bitcoin network has an advantage in liquidity, recognition, and age that Ethereum cannot replicate. However, ignoring the evidence from institutional flows would constitute an analysis error. The market is sending a signal: native yield is an attribute that capital managers are willing to pay for. The capital inflow into Ethereum ETFs confirms this willingness.
This is not about choosing an absolute winner. Bitcoin and Ethereum serve different functions. Bitcoin operates as a global reserve asset. Its programmed scarcity and immutability give it a value that does not depend on yield generation. Ethereum operates as an execution platform and as an asset that generates income for its holders. Both models are logically consistent within their own parameters.
Saylor is correct in stating that Bitcoin does not require native yield to exist or to maintain its dominant position in market capitalization. However, the data indicates that native yield is relevant in the competition for institutional capital. The ETF flows and the adoption of corporate staking show that a portion of the market prefers assets that generate passive income
Strategy has built its strategy around the appreciation of Bitcoin’s price. As long as the price rises, its model will function. In a sideways or prolonged bearish market scenario, Ethereum’s native yield becomes an operational income that Bitcoin cannot offer by itself.
Your investment decision depends on your holding period and your risk tolerance. If you are looking for a long-term reserve asset with a defined scarcity thesis, Bitcoin maintains its position as the purest option. If you are looking to generate cash flow from your digital holdings without selling the principal capital, Ethereum offers a proven mechanism in operation.
The market has space for both assets. Denying the utility of native yield solely because it does not fit a specific business model may distort your reading of the environment. Capital flows are clear: a segment of the market is allocating resources to native yield, and that allocation is reflected in the ETF figures.