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Bitcoin’s Next Phase Is Bigger Than Holding BTC: Saylor Outlines 5-Layer Stack
Michael Saylor says bitcoin’s evolution could extend far beyond corporate treasury strategies, outlining a five-layer financial framework built on BTC.
Key Takeaways:
Saylor Details How Bitcoin-Backed Markets Could Move Beyond Treasury Holdings
Michael Saylor, executive chairman of Strategy (Nasdaq: MSTR), says bitcoin’s next phase is not limited to companies adding BTC to balance sheets. In a June 16 article on X, he described a five-layer market structure that starts with bitcoin and extends into credit, money, yield products, and equity.
The framework positions BTC as Digital Capital, the foundation of the stack. Above bitcoin sits Digital Credit, which converts volatility into income-producing investments. Digital Money builds on that credit layer by combining it with cash-equivalent reserves to create stable-value, yield-bearing products. Digital Yield adds leverage and structured strategies for investors seeking higher returns. The final layer is Digital Equity, which absorbs residual risk and captures upside.
Saylor wrote:
The Strategy executive chairman’s argument centers on matching bitcoin exposure to different investor needs. A family office may seek appreciation, while an insurer may want income. A payment company may need stable settlement. A retiree may prefer yield over direct exposure to BTC’s daily price swings.
The stack is designed to serve those mandates without changing Bitcoin itself. Saylor described bitcoin as scarce, global, liquid, programmable, divisible, and auditable. His model keeps the base layer intact. Saylor emphasized: “ Bitcoin remains bitcoin. The world builds on top.”
Digital Money Would Pair Bitcoin-Backed Credit With Fiat Liquidity
Digital Credit is the first layer built above direct BTC ownership. Saylor described it as a way to convert high- volatility Digital Capital into lower- volatility income. He cited STRC-style securities as senior, high-yield, short-duration instruments issued by a bitcoin-backed company.
Digital Money builds on that credit layer. Saylor described it as a stable-value, daily liquid product combining bitcoin-backed Digital Credit with fiat cash equivalents. He argued that stable-value Digital Money remains useful since wages, taxes, mortgages, corporate accounting, and most commercial activity are still denominated in fiat currencies.
Saylor noted:
The final two layers target investors seeking either higher returns or greater upside. Digital Yield would include levered or structured income products, while Digital Equity would refer to MSTR-style common equity that absorbs volatility and captures remaining upside. Saylor noted that risks can still change over time, including credit spreads, liquidity conditions, interest rates, and issuer perception.