Key Takeaways
- Saylor declares Bitcoin reached its floor around $60,000 in February after weak hands were eliminated
- Growing ETF demand and corporate Bitcoin purchases are soaking up new BTC supply
- The development of banking and digital credit systems on Bitcoin may catalyze the next rally
- Saylor dismisses quantum computing concerns as theoretical issues decades in the future
- Mizuho maintains Outperform rating on Strategy with $320 target price
During a recent Mizuho investor event in Miami, Michael Saylor, Executive Chairman of Strategy (MSTR), made a bold declaration that Bitcoin has already established its market bottom.
According to Saylor, the cryptocurrency found its floor near the $60,000 level during early February. He emphasized that true market bottoms in crypto aren’t determined by traditional valuation metrics — instead, they occur when sellers under duress have completely exited their positions.
The forced sellers Saylor referenced primarily consist of mining operations with excessive leverage and corporations with fragile financial structures. After these entities are eliminated from the market, he noted, downward price pressure subsides dramatically.
Saylor highlighted multiple tailwinds now underpinning Bitcoin’s price. Among them are anticipated interest rate cuts that will enhance macro liquidity conditions, consistent ETF purchases that consume daily Bitcoin production, and corporations reallocating treasury reserves into Bitcoin.
He emphasized that market reversals stem primarily from capital structure dynamics and liquidity conditions rather than emotional investor behavior.
Catalysts for the Next Rally Phase
Saylor pinpointed the emergence of banking and digital credit infrastructure built upon Bitcoin as a crucial future catalyst.
He noted that digital credit frameworks already exist, citing Strategy’s STRC preferred shares as a working example. These instruments offer an 11.5% return, which Saylor characterizes as significantly lower than his projections for long-term Bitcoin price appreciation.
While banking credit systems utilizing Bitcoin as collateral have yet to materialize, Saylor expects them to emerge gradually. He portrayed Strategy as transforming Bitcoin “from a nonyielding asset into a capital markets engine.”
Strategy has also revealed plans to establish a Bitcoin security council. This council will incorporate other major institutional holders and concentrate on research initiatives and stakeholder communications.
Quantum Computing Concerns Rejected
Addressing quantum computing anxieties, Saylor dismissed recent warnings as overblown. He characterized the potential threat as purely hypothetical and unlikely to pose practical risks for many decades.
He further noted that Bitcoin’s open-source architecture enables cryptographic enhancements to be implemented long before any genuine attack vector emerges.
Mizuho analysts Dan Dolev and Alexander Jenkins reported on the event and reaffirmed their Outperform rating on Strategy stock. Their $320 price target suggests approximately 150% potential gains from Strategy’s present trading level near $127.

