Recently, an interesting reversal—VanEck's Head of Digital Asset Research, Matthew Sigel, spoke out on social media, criticizing The New York Times for misrepresenting the concept regarding MicroStrategy.
Here's what happened: The article quoted VanEck founder Jan van Eck saying "we have avoided it," and then used this to imply that VanEck is bearish on MicroStrategy. Sounds pretty absurd, right?
Sigel clarified the true intention—Jan van Eck's "avoidance" does not mean he is dismissive of MicroStrategy, but rather refers to VanEck's own strategic positioning, indicating they won't simply follow the trend blindly. These are two different things.
This incident reflects a phenomenon: in the path of cryptocurrency and institutional investment, strategies among different institutions vary greatly. Some are aggressive, some conservative, each with their own logic. MicroStrategy's all-in Bitcoin approach has attracted attention, but that doesn't mean all institutions will follow suit. As a major asset management firm, VanEck has its own risk considerations and allocation strategies, which is perfectly normal.
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PessimisticOracle
· 6h ago
The New York Times' move is truly a classic case of clickbait. Taking things out of context has been overused.
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GasFeeAssassin
· 7h ago
The New York Times really blew it this time, mistakenly reading "avoid" as "bearish," media cutting leeks also need to have some logic.
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¯\_(ツ)_/¯
· 7h ago
The New York Times is playing word games again, really hilarious, deliberately twisting words to spread false rumors.
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Degentleman
· 7h ago
The media is really incredible; taking things out of context has become a tired routine.
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Once again, a scene of a news agency shooting itself in the foot. The New York Times' move is truly outrageous.
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So, as they say, each to their own. Not all institutions need to go all-in to be considered serious.
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Haha, VanEck directly responded, which is quite refreshing—better than those who stay silent and act smart.
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Misunderstanding the meaning and then stirring up trouble—I've seen too much of this kind of operation.
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MicroStrategy's all-in courage is indeed strong, but VanEck has its own strategy. There's no conflict here.
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SnapshotStriker
· 7h ago
The New York Times' move is really outrageous, cherry-picking and taking things out of context as usual.
Recently, an interesting reversal—VanEck's Head of Digital Asset Research, Matthew Sigel, spoke out on social media, criticizing The New York Times for misrepresenting the concept regarding MicroStrategy.
Here's what happened: The article quoted VanEck founder Jan van Eck saying "we have avoided it," and then used this to imply that VanEck is bearish on MicroStrategy. Sounds pretty absurd, right?
Sigel clarified the true intention—Jan van Eck's "avoidance" does not mean he is dismissive of MicroStrategy, but rather refers to VanEck's own strategic positioning, indicating they won't simply follow the trend blindly. These are two different things.
This incident reflects a phenomenon: in the path of cryptocurrency and institutional investment, strategies among different institutions vary greatly. Some are aggressive, some conservative, each with their own logic. MicroStrategy's all-in Bitcoin approach has attracted attention, but that doesn't mean all institutions will follow suit. As a major asset management firm, VanEck has its own risk considerations and allocation strategies, which is perfectly normal.