Key takeaways
- Saylor says he “feels invigorated” by Bitcoin’s mission amid a digital currency revolution.
- The strategy continued to accumulate throughout the 2026 bear market, with bitcoin trading near $64,000.
- Saylor projects layers of digital capital, credit, and money that will drive Bitcoin adoption through 2036.
Persistent optimism despite fragile macros
Saylor’s comment continues a series of statements in which the executive president has recast the bear market as a phase of construction rather than a crisis. This follows a detailed essay in which he described the next decade of Bitcoin in his eyes. He compressed his thesis into a single progression, writing:
“Digital capital becomes digital credit. Digital credit becomes digital money. This is the next phase of bitcoin adoption: not just more buyers, but more balance sheets.
Saylor continued to assert that the first era of bitcoin adoption was about individuals and funds buying the asset, while the next period will be about building institutions on top of it. Over the next ten years, he plans bitcoin held as a Treasury reserve asset, pledged as collateral in credit markets, used for high-value settlements, and anchoring new forms of digital currency.
Bitcoin.com News reported the same thing recently when Saylor described bitcoin adoption enters a larger game and has outlined a five-tiered stack of capital, credit and currency products that it hopes to form around the asset. Strategy’s own holdings appear to be its proof of concept, given that the company used preferred stock and bitcoin-backed credit instruments to continue buying during the recession.
The message of invigoration also follows Saylor’s posture in recent volatilitywhen he reaffirmed the strategy’s emphasis on bitcoin even as the company’s shares fell and critics questioned the cash flow model.
A defense of the slowness of Bitcoin
Notably, Saylor’s optimism is based on what Bitcoin does not do. In his July 5 essay, he asserted that the network’s resistance to change was its main characteristic, writing:
“The most important feature of Bitcoin is not that it can be easily upgraded. The most important feature is that it cannot be changed casually.”
In his view, the role of a monetary network is not to “move fast and break things”, but to move slowly and not break, and this restraint is the foundation on which banks, funds, insurers, pensions and sovereigns can ultimately build. Skeptics counter that the same period tested the model as Bitcoin spent much of the year in a massive decline (all while Strategy was facing scrutiny over dividend obligations tied to its preferred shares).
Yet the executive chairman’s tone suggests no retreat, as he has repeatedly described 2026 as the year Bitcoin will reach consensus status as the world’s digital capital, a claim that will be tested by prices, regulators and credit markets. The next signal to watch is Strategy’s weekly release cadence, where any new buys or sells will show whether its latest burst of optimism translates into action on the balance sheet.


