The market fundamentally does not need retail investors to buy, but the market is not bought by institutions either; rather, institutions use leveraged money obtained through borrowing to buy. Although this money still belongs to retail investors, the usage rights are in the hands of institutions, which belong to high-interest derivatives. Retail investors are greedy for interest, and institutions will ultimately blow up this borrowed principal. Currently, MicroStrategy's financing cost annual interest is 8%. This is the way of derivatives; the market expands stablecoins to buy U.S. bonds, and institutions continuously raise financing interest, constantly providing liquidity to the market. Subprime bonds have a similar derivative play.