With Strategy’s cash reserve now at $3 billion, founder Michael Saylor has named corporate adoption as a necessary condition for Bitcoin to become a global currency network.
Summary
- Michael Saylor says corporate adoption is essential for Bitcoin to become a global currency network.
- Strategy’s $3 billion cash reserve has helped ease concerns about forced Bitcoin sales.
- Bitcoin Japan plans its first treasury purchase as companies expand exposure to the asset.
In a July 18 X post, Saylor described companies as legal structures that allow people to work toward a shared mission with more efficiency, transparency, credibility, scale, and staying power.
Based on that framework, Saylor argued that enterprise adoption is necessary for Bitcoin’s development as a worldwide monetary network. He also described the process as inevitable and welcomed companies taking a larger role in the asset’s growth.
His comments place corporations at the center of Bitcoin’s next stage rather than treating business adoption as an optional source of demand. Strategy has already built its business model around holding Bitcoin, while its latest increase in dollar reserves has drawn a positive assessment from JPMorgan.
Strategy’s cash reserve has reduced forced-sale concerns
In a July 15 research note, JPMorgan identified Strategy’s $3 billion U.S. dollar reserve as a constructive signal for Bitcoin during a period of inconsistent demand for spot exchange-traded funds.
According to the bank, spot Bitcoin ETFs attracted inflows last week before returning to outflows this week. Leveraged ETFs tied to Strategy, however, recorded positive inflows for a seventh consecutive week, with JPMorgan attributing much of that demand to retail investors.
JPMorgan had previously argued that Strategy could reduce concerns about forced Bitcoin sales by keeping enough cash to cover two to three years of preferred-stock dividends. Although the bank’s analysts could not determine whether the larger reserve had already improved investor sentiment, they viewed the increase as another positive development for Bitcoin.
Corporate demand is also expanding outside the United States. As reported by crypto.news, Tokyo Stock Exchange-listed Bitcoin Japan plans to raise about $59.5 million, including $4.08 million for its first Bitcoin treasury purchase since adopting its new corporate identity.
CoinPost reported that Bitcoin Japan, formerly known as Horita Marusho, intends to issue 1.5 billion yen in unsecured convertible bonds with stock acquisition rights. A second series of stock acquisition rights will be issued through Cayman Islands-based EVO FUND.
If investors fully exercise the securities, Bitcoin Japan expects to receive net proceeds of about 9.657 billion yen, according to CoinPost.
Bitcoin’s fixed supply supports its case against AI investment
Saylor’s push for corporate participation comes as investors compare Bitcoin with artificial intelligence, another sector attracting large amounts of capital. JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon expects AI investment to reach $725 billion this year, while BlackRock executives have argued that rising government debt and concerns about currencies support Bitcoin’s long-term case.
Binance co-founder Changpeng Zhao has drawn a distinction between the two investment themes, presenting Bitcoin as monetary protection rather than a rival technology to AI.
“AI is great, but it does not protect you against inflation. Bitcoin does.”
Weeks earlier, Zhao had identified AI as one reason for weaker crypto market conditions in 2026. As previously reported by crypto.news, he argued that emerging AI businesses had absorbed some speculative capital that might otherwise have entered digital assets.
While Zhao focused on Bitcoin’s monetary role, Saylor’s July 18 post concentrated on the structures needed to expand its use. Under Saylor’s argument, corporate balance sheets, legal frameworks, and organized capital would help Bitcoin develop from a held asset into a sustainable global currency network.







