Who Murdered Bitcoin?': Cramer Takes Dig at Saylor's $10 Billion Loss

The financial and cryptocurrency communities are harshly scrutinizing Saylor's Strategy after the company logged massive unrealized losses.
CNBC host Jim Cramer took to social media to mock the prominent Bitcoin bull. In the meantime, longtime crypto skeptic Peter Schiff piled on with accusations of a collapsing "Ponzi."
A $10.8 billion unrealized loss
Saylor's Strategy is now facing its largest unrealized loss in its history of nearly $11 billion.
Jim Cramer posted a blunt question on the X platform: "Who murdered Bitcoin?"
Traditional finance commentators are questioning whether Saylor's leveraged accumulation model has finally backfired.
After years of adhering to a "never sell" pledge, the company recently liquidated 32 Bitcoins. Certainly, this is just a fraction of its roughly $54 billion holdings, but it has marked the first sale since late 2022.
Investment advisor Ross Gerber recently lambasted the move as a market "rug pull" driven by greed.
A "collapse" and a "scam"
Schiff has argued that the current price action is not normal market fluctuation, stating, "This isn't volatility, it's a collapse in price as investors dump Bitcoin to avoid larger losses or to seek out better investment opportunities. It's a rejection of your entire thesis."
He noted that Saylor is trapped in a cycle where he "needs to keep buying Bitcoin to stop it from collapsing as others sell."
According to Schiff, this creates a dangerous dependency: "If he can't issue more stock he can't buy more Bitcoin."
The gold bug has accused Saylor of breaking promises to investors regarding the safety of their principal. "If the shares trade at a discount, MSTR can't issue any more shares at par," Schiff argued. "That blows up the Ponzi. So he is forced to raise the dividend to keep the scam going."