Key Highlights
- Michael Saylor says that Bitcoin has gained global acceptance as digital capital.
- He added that the traditional four-year cycle is no longer relevant.
- According to Saylor, Bitcoin’s biggest threat isn’t external but internal.
Michael Saylor, the executive chairman of Strategy, said Bitcoin (BTC) has reached a point where it is widely viewed as “digital capital.”
In an X post on Saturday, Saylor stated that the traditional four-year cycle of BTC is dead, with future price action now influenced by institutional capital flows, bank involvement, and digital credit products. He also warned about the biggest threat associated with Bitcoin, which lies in “bad ideas driving iatrogenic protocol changes.”
Understanding the statement
Saylor said Bitcoin has effectively won its ideological and competitive battles, establishing itself as a dominant form of digital money.
Speaking at the Digital Asset Summit 2026 on March 26, he described Bitcoin as “digital capital,” pointing to growing acceptance among institutions, banks, corporations, and regulators. He emphasized a shift from a speculative asset to a more established financial instrument.
His remarks come at a crucial time for digital assets. Multiple independent analyses, including Grayscale research, Bitcoin Magazine, and others, report that the four-year cycle is fading or already dead.
The warning on protocol changes
Saylor used the term “iatrogenic” to describe risks arising from protocol upgrades or improvements that could possibly damage the core properties of Bitcoin, namely scarcity, decentralization, and immutability.
Saylor, being a long-time supporter of Bitcoin, has long railed against feature creep or soft forks that risk introducing complexity, bugs, or governance disputes. According to him, the greatest fear revolving around Bitcoin does not come from external regulation or competition, but it’s internal, influenced by bad ideas during bull markets.
Current market scenario
At the time of writing, Bitcoin is trading at $67,274, 0.69% up in the last 24 hours and 0.62% up in the past week, according to CoinMarketCap. The 24-hour low and high remained $66,761 and $67,246, respectively.
As per TradingView technicals, the one-day moving average shows that if BTC continues to show an upward trajectory, then it will test its first resistance at $73,952, followed by its second resistance at $76,562 on the Fibonacci scale. A contrary movement will drag to the support zones of $65,504 and $62,894 on the same scale.
Broader context
As 2026 progresses, the market will eventually test Saylor’s thesis. Strategy continues to accumulate Bitcoin, holding approximately 762,099 BTC, with a target of reaching 1 million BTC.
Whether Bitcoin can live up to its hard-money characteristics at the time of scaling into mainstream finance will shape the coming years. Saylor sees that the ideological war is over and the new battleground is execution.
