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Michael Saylor: Bitcoin prices may have bottomed out, and quantum risk is exaggerated
As the crypto market seeks direction amid the complex interplay of macro liquidity and on-chain structures, the judgments of industry flagship figures often serve as key references for interpreting noise. Strategy Executive Chairman Michael Saylor recently expressed views at a Mizuho Financial Group event, believing that Bitcoin may have already formed a price bottom after the forced deleveraging at the start of the year. Meanwhile, he also provided a clear quantitative assessment regarding the widely discussed threat of quantum computing. This article will analyze this event, combining Gate market data, on-chain structures, and industry evolution logic to objectively dissect the current market position and potential evolution paths.
Core Thesis Retrospective
According to the minutes of the event published on April 9, 2026, Michael Saylor explicitly stated two core judgments:
It is important to clarify that the above reflects Michael Saylor’s viewpoints based on his research framework, representing subjective market participant judgments.
On-Chain Verification of the Bottom Logic
To examine the objective basis of this judgment, we need to revisit the market structure and on-chain behavior in the first quarter of 2026. The following analysis is based on publicly available market data and Gate market data as of April 9, 2026.
Facts and Data Presentation:
Dissecting Public Opinion: From Credit Engines to Quantum Panic
Current crypto market sentiment shows polarization, with this event effectively connecting two recent focal topics.
Bitcoin’s new growth engine—digital credit markets
Saylor suggests that the next bull cycle’s catalyst will no longer be purely risk-hedging narratives or spot ETF inflows, but the combination of bank credit and digital credit. For example, Strategy’s preferred stock of STRC offers an annualized yield far below Bitcoin’s long-term appreciation expectations. This mechanism is seen as an early practice of transforming Bitcoin from a “non-yielding asset” into a “capital market engine.”
This is a forward-looking perspective on asset function evolution. Its logic is that once Bitcoin’s market cap is sufficiently large and volatility converges, a Bitcoin-backed credit market will unleash liquidity far exceeding simple “buy-and-hold” strategies.
The realistic boundary of quantum computing threats
Recently, academic and cybersecurity discussions about quantum computing cracking elliptic curve encryption have intensified. Saylor describes this as “theoretical, distant, and solvable.”
From a cryptographic engineering perspective, Bitcoin’s SHA-256 algorithm and ECDSA signatures do face future theoretical threats from quantum computing. However, the current physical qubit count and error correction capabilities of quantum computers are still several orders of magnitude away from cracking Bitcoin’s encryption. Moreover, the Bitcoin developer community has begun pre-research on post-quantum cryptography migration paths.
Multi-scenario Evolution: Future Paths Based on Current Structures
Combining the current price of $70,957 and a market cap of approximately $1.33 trillion, we can project possible future scenarios based on different variables. The following are speculative models, not definitive forecasts.
Scenario 1: Baseline projection (gradual penetration of credit markets)
Scenario 2: Risk scenario (stress test under macro liquidity contraction)
Scenario 3: Structural upgrade scenario (technological narrative validation)
Conclusion
Michael Saylor’s discourse offers a unique perspective for market participants—shifting from short-term price volatility back to long-term capital structure evolution. The view that $60,000 is a confirmed bottom has some support from the recent two-month price recovery; the assessment of quantum risk provides a rational timeframe to ease unnecessary market anxiety.
For market participants, understanding the evolution of crypto assets must go beyond simple supply-demand charts, penetrating into institutional capital allocation, credit market infrastructure, and underlying technological security. Gate will continue to provide high-quality market observations and in-depth analysis based on objective data and industry evolution.