>
there is an unsupportable leap being made here
You think that because you're misinterpreting me. I'm in no way claiming that any solvent company can prove it, I'm simply claiming that any company can prove that they have bitcoin reserves to cover bitcoins promised as account balances.
> Banks (lending institutions) do not operate under any such pretense
You seem to be saying that banks are under no legal obligation to serve cash on demand to customers. While you might be right, again you're misinterpreting me. Banks do in fact make claims to their customers that they'll be able to get cash out of their account on demand. They're called demand deposit accounts for a reason. And certainly customers expect to be able to withdraw their cash on demand.
> With a 100% of investment cash hoard, there is zero lending and zero return
I did say "pretend" did I not?
> “relate to” is a far cry from 100% “reserve”
Indeed. Again, you seem to be misunderstanding me. You're putting the words "100% reserve" in my mouth, when I never said any such thing. Proof of 80%/50%/20% reserves is still useful if that's the clear expectation for the customer/client.
> Nonsense is English for “doesn’t make sense”
Literally, sure. But in actual use it carries a dismissive and rude connotation.