Why Bitcoin Advocate Samson Mow Says Strategy's "Maybe We'll Sell" Stance Is a Competitive Weapon
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When Michael Saylor suggested Strategy might sell some Bitcoin to fund dividends, the reaction from parts of the Bitcoin community was predictably mixed. But prominent Bitcoin advocate Samson Mow offered a counterintuitive take that cuts to the heart of how large publicly traded companies navigate adversarial financial markets. "Never selling limits optionality. Public markets are war. In war, you need all available tools at your disposal," Mow said, arguing that a company which publicly commits to never selling a single asset has essentially handed a roadmap to short sellers and arbitrageurs looking to exploit predictable behavior. By contrast, a company that might sell, hedge, issue, or buy at any given moment is genuinely difficult to game — its unpredictability is itself a defensive asset. "The more tools Strategy holds, the fewer angles its adversaries have," Mow added, framing Saylor's comment not as a capitulation on Bitcoin conviction but as a tactically intelligent expansion of the company's financial toolkit.
The argument reflects a broader truth about how sophisticated market participants think about corporate treasury management. Strategy is not just a Bitcoin holding company — it is a publicly traded entity with preferred shareholders, debt obligations, and a stock price that is constantly being evaluated, shorted, and arbitraged by professional traders. A rigid, publicly stated policy of never selling under any circumstances is a gift to anyone looking to construct a trade against the company, because it removes one of the most powerful variables from the equation. Saylor's willingness to introduce ambiguity — even if actual Bitcoin sales remain unlikely given his long-term conviction — makes Strategy a more resilient and harder-to-predict counterparty in public markets. For retail investors watching Strategy's every move, Mow's framing is a useful reminder that corporate strategy and personal Bitcoin conviction are not always the same thing, and that keeping adversaries guessing is often worth more than making ideological commitments in public.
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Never locking yourself into one path publicly is smart.
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Smart move honestly.
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Public companies play a different game

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Interesting how one comment changed sentiment so fast.
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Keeping shorts uncomfortable is part of the strategy.
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Corporate logic and personal conviction are not the same thing.
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Uncertainty can be a defensive weapon too

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This feels way more tactical than emotional.
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Kind of impressive psychological positioning ngl

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Most retail traders still don’t understand optionality.

