Michael Saylor Shared His Long-Term Vision for Bitcoin’s Price

Michael Saylor appeared on CNBC to discuss Bitcoin's position in the current cycle, Strategy's digital credit product STRC, and a long-term price target that reframes every other number he offered in the interview.
- Saylor: Bitcoin bottomed at $60K, now in spring phase, rally expected from current levels.
- Long-term target: $21 million per coin 21 years out.
- STRC preferred stock: $10.5B in 10 months, $24B annual run rate, 11.5% tax-deferred dividend.
- Strategy holds approximately $65B Bitcoin, annualized return ~60% vs Bitcoin’s ~40%.
- Digital credit framing: 11.5% tax-deferred vs 3.5% taxable money market.
Where Saylor Puts Bitcoin in the Cycle Right Now
Saylor described the current price environment as a recovery in progress, placing the October peak at approximately $125,000, the bottom at $60,000, and the current moment as what he called the spring phase of the cycle. He sees decent support at current levels and expects a rally, with macro headwinds as the primary near-term friction. On the regulatory side, he identified the passage of the CLARITY Act as a significant catalyst, alongside the SEC’s innovation exemption for tokenized securities guidance.
The halving context Saylor offered is worth noting: the next halving is approximately two years away, and he argues the credit market is now absorbing every Bitcoin the miners produce and will continue to do so permanently. He went further, claiming Strategy will likely buy all Bitcoin mined between now and 2140, the year the last Bitcoin is expected to be produced under the 21 million maximum supply cap.
What STRC Is and What It Requires to Work
Every number Saylor offers about STRC, the 11.5% dividend, the $10.5 billion in 10 months, the $24 billion run rate, is a derivative of a single underlying assumption: that Bitcoin will appreciate at 30% annually, and if that assumption fails, the structured product built on top of it fails with it. Saylor frames the product as synthetic yield extracted from expected Bitcoin appreciation, targeting $100 per share with a variable dividend rate and a shelf registration that keeps the price anchored. He describes it as a fixed-income alternative that pays 11.5% tax deferred against a money market returning 3.5% taxable, targeting retirees and fixed-income investors who want exposure without volatility.
The common stock absorbs the risk and the volatility while the preferred stock takes the first 11.5%: Saylor has built a two-tier structure where Bitcoin believers who want comfort ride the preferred, and Bitcoin believers who want maximum exposure ride the common, and both are betting on the same underlying thesis. Over six years, MSTR common stock has returned approximately 60% annualized versus Bitcoin’s approximately 40%, with STRC credit returning approximately 3%. The common equity captured the amplified upside. The preferred captured the yield. The Bitcoin appreciation thesis is what made both possible.
The $21 Million Target and What It Requires to Be True
Saylor’s long-term Bitcoin price target is the number that reframes everything else in the interview. When asked what Bitcoin reaches at full monetization, he said: “21 years out, I don’t know why it wouldn’t be 21 million a coin.” At current prices near $78,000, based on prices visible elsewhere in this session’s context rather than a figure stated in the interview, that target implies a 269-fold appreciation from current levels.
Saylor’s $21 million per coin target 21 years out implies a 269-fold appreciation from current levels, which is not a price prediction in any conventional sense but a statement about what Bitcoin becomes when it reaches full monetization of global capital. For that target to be reachable, Bitcoin must continue absorbing global capital at a rate that sustains its appreciation thesis through each halving cycle, each regulatory transition, and each technological challenge including the quantum computing scenario Saylor dismisses as manageable through a network upgrade comparable to a software patch.
This morning on CNBC, I discussed the case for Digital Credit $STRC, its impact on $MSTR, and my long-term $BTC forecast with @JoeSquawk. pic.twitter.com/0Hmz8BLfuG
— Michael Saylor (@saylor) May 21, 2026
On quantum computing risk, he was brief: when consensus forms about a genuine quantum threat, the network will upgrade in months, comparable to how software platforms push security updates. He does not treat it as a structural risk to the thesis.
If Bitcoin holds above its current support levels and the CLARITY Act advances through the current legislative session, the two catalysts Saylor identifies as near-term drivers will have materialized on the timeline he describes. If macro headwinds persist and Bitcoin fails to recover toward its October high before the next halving in approximately two years, the spring phase thesis will have been premature and the STRC growth rate will face its first real test against a flat or declining Bitcoin price.
The information provided in this article is for educational purposes only and does not constitute financial, investment, or trading advice. Coindoo.com does not endorse or recommend any specific investment strategy or cryptocurrency. Always conduct your own research and consult with a licensed financial advisor before making any investment decisions.









