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Michael Saylor, the executive chairman most closely associated with large-scale corporate $BTC accumulation, has articulated a position that cuts against one of the more persistent criticisms of the asset: that it produces no income.
According to Pluang, Saylor argues Bitcoin itself doesn't need to generate yield, because financial products built around it can do that job instead.
The Argument and What It Actually Claims Saylor's framing draws a deliberate line between the asset and the instruments that reference it.
Bitcoin, in this view, functions like a base layer — a store of value with no native yield mechanism — while structured products, lending facilities, and other financial wrappers layered on top can produce income for holders.
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