The Wall Street Journal

MicroStrategy’s Magical Bitcoin Buying Machine Uses Some Wacky Math

Citing ‘yield’ as a performance measure is likely to confuse some investors already overpaying for its stock

Michael Saylor, co-founder and executive chairman of MicroStrategy, has become a bitcoin evangelist.
Michael Saylor, co-founder and executive chairman of MicroStrategy, has become a bitcoin evangelist. Photo: Liam Kennedy/Bloomberg

Every new market mania needs new metrics to attract investors and explain the reason for its existence. Here’s one for the bitcoin boom: “BTC yield.”

MicroStrategy, which once was a humdrum software firm, introduced this unusual term to its investors in August. BTC, for the uninitiated, means bitcoin. Yield typically refers to the dividend a company pays as a percentage of its stock price, or to the interest rate a lender expects to earn on a loan or bond. This isn’t either of those.

WSJ Logo
Europe Draws Up Retaliatory Tariffs for U.S. Goods in Case No Trade Deal Is ReachedExternal link

Europe Draws Up Retaliatory Tariffs for U.S. Goods in Case No Trade Deal Is Reached