Michael Saylor, co-founder of the company now called Strategy and one of Bitcoin’s most vocal champions, says the next great migration of wealth will happen on the Bitcoin network.
In recent remarks, Saylor framed BTC as the backbone of a future digital financial system and warned that the United States should accumulate as much of the asset as possible “before other nations wake up to the shift.”
“All global capital is headed into cyberspace,” he said, arguing that Bitcoin’s decentralized design makes it the natural settlement layer for that transition. “The earlier you own it, the bigger the strategic edge.”
Strategy’s own balance sheet reflects that conviction: the firm has spent the past five years amassing roughly 582,000 BTC—now worth more than $63 billion.
Saylor also brushed aside fears that quantum computing could undermine Bitcoin’s cryptography, telling CNBC such claims are “just marketing spin” for rival projects.
Bitcoin belongs in the same league as the printing press and the Model T, according to a new research note from Bank of America.
El Salvador is still buying Bitcoin in spite of a $1.4 billion International Monetary Fund package that was meant to curb further government accumulation.
Metaplanet has become the world’s seventh-largest corporate owner of Bitcoin after adding another 1,112 coins to its treasury on Monday.
Bitcoin’s roller-coaster days may be fading, and that shift could push the world’s largest digital asset into more professional portfolios, according to Coatue Management founder Philippe Laffont.