Bitcoin critic Peter Schiff escalated his attacks on Trump-linked crypto ventures and Strategy’s Bitcoin model. He predicted investor losses could trigger lawsuits against the Trump Organization.
Schiff also said Democrats may use the controversy in future political advertising. Separately, he attacked Strategy after the company disclosed a major Bitcoin sale.
Schiff focused his criticism on buyers of Trump-linked crypto assets and company shares. In an X post, he alleged that the Trump family made billions from public buyers.
He argued that those gains reflected buyer losses rather than newly created economic value. The claim represented Schiff’s assessment and did not establish legal wrongdoing.
Schiff X Post| Source: X
Schiff suggested some buyers may have expected losses because certain purchases could function as disguised political payments. Others, he said, may have bought small amounts mainly to signal political support.
However, Peter Schiff argued that another group expected genuine investment returns. He described those buyers as unsophisticated Trump supporters who believed they were purchasing legitimate investments.
Based on that view, Schiff predicted the Trump Organization could face lawsuits from buyers seeking compensation. No such legal outcome was established by Schiff’s post.
He also connected the dispute to U.S. politics. Schiff said Democrats could feature extreme investor-loss cases in future campaign advertising.
Schiff’s comments came near his separate attack on Strategy, the Bitcoin-focused company associated with Michael Saylor. In a July 7 post on X, Schiff called Strategy’s current structure a mid-cycle Ponzi.
That criticism centered on Strategy’s shift from its earlier approach. Schiff said the company had moved away from issuing stock and debt to buy Bitcoin. He argued that the newer model depends on selling Bitcoin to cover interest, dividends, debt costs, and possible buybacks.
Schiff Comment on Strategy| Source: X
The remarks followed Strategy’s latest Bitcoin sale. The company sold 3,588 BTC for about $216 million to fund dividends tied to its Digital Credit securities. After the sale, Strategy said it still held 843,775 BTC and $2.55 billion in U.S. dollar reserves.
Saylor has defended Strategy’s ability to sell limited amounts of Bitcoin while keeping its broader accumulation plan. He said the company aims to avoid becoming a net Bitcoin seller, rather than follow an absolute rule against any sale.
Additionally, Saylor has said any future Bitcoin sale would fit into a wider capital plan. In earlier comments, he said Strategy could sell one Bitcoin while seeking to buy 10 to 20 more Bitcoin through its treasury model.
The latest dispute places Schiff’s criticism on two fronts. On one side, he questioned Trump-linked crypto and stock sales. On the other hand, he challenged Strategy’s decision to sell Bitcoin while presenting itself as a long-term holder.
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