
MicroStrategy is pushing a new narrative around Bitcoin, with CEO Phong Le detailing how the firm is building a yield-driven system around BTC.
Le described the approach as a “digital credit ecosystem,” where capital is deployed into Bitcoin-linked strategies with target returns as high as 30%, and a portion of that yield is passed back to investors holding preferred shares like STRC.
Step-by-Step: How the Model Works
Le broke the structure down clearly, drawing direct comparisons to traditional finance:
Step 1: Capital Base Is Built
The company first raises capital from investors, similar to how banks collect deposits. These investors become the “capital holders” in the system.
Step 2: Capital Is Deployed Into Bitcoin
Instead of issuing mortgages or car loans, Strategy allocates that capital into Bitcoin-related opportunities, targeting high-yield exposure (hypothetically ~30% ARR).
Step 3: Yield Is Generated From Deployment
The return comes from how that capital interacts with the Bitcoin ecosystem. While exact mechanisms aren’t fully detailed, the key idea is that Bitcoin becomes the base layer where returns are generated.
Step 4: A Portion Is Paid Back to Holders
Just like banks share interest with depositors, Strategy distributes part of the yield back to investors. Le referenced returns in the range of 7.5% to 11.5% going back to preferred shareholders.
The Traditional Finance Comparison
Le directly compared this to banking models, where institutions issue loans at 5% to 30% returns, depending on risk, and pass a share of that yield to depositors.
The difference is that Strategy is not lending to consumers or businesses. Instead, it is allocating capital into Bitcoin as the core layer of yield generation.
“Banks earn 5-30% yields on loans, then share a portion with depositors. That is how the digital credit ecosystem works,” he said.
What This Means
Phong Le is arguing that MicroStrategy isn’t a bank, but it’s using a similar playbook—taking capital, deploying it into Bitcoin to generate returns, and then sharing a portion of that yield back with investors. That’s what he calls “digital credit.”
“So that entire ecosystem of a bank, and we’re not a bank, right? But the ecosystem of a bank providing loans out, getting your percentage, and providing part of that back to a capital holder, that’s what digital credit is,” he added.
If this scales, Bitcoin shifts from just being held for gains to becoming part of a system where money flows in, earns yield, and pays out, like a credit market built on BTC.
It’s still early, but it gives enough room for investors to think that in the near term, Bitcoin could be positioned as the base layer for a new digital credit system.
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