
MicroStrategy CEO Michael Saylor said in a June 2025 interview with Bloomberg that Bitcoin bear markets will no longer recur and predicted a long-term target price of $1 million. He believes that the structural growth in institutional demand has fundamentally changed Bitcoin’s market dynamics. His remarks quickly spread on social media and sparked widespread debate among cryptocurrency investors.
Saylor argues that the underlying demand structure for Bitcoin has undergone a fundamental shift. In the past, retail investors dominated Bitcoin’s price fluctuations, with emotional buying and selling causing severe cyclical crashes; now, large institutional funds, publicly traded companies, and asset managers are continuously accumulating and holding Bitcoin long-term.
He states that this stable institutional demand, combined with Bitcoin’s fixed supply cap of 21 million coins, forms his bullish core logic: “Global governments print more money every year, but Bitcoin follows strict rules, and no one can change its supply.” Saylor characterizes Bitcoin as a “digital store of value,” often compared to gold, and points out that with increasing global adoption and awareness, the path to $1 million has long-term logical support. He explicitly sets $1 million as a long-term goal, not a short-term expectation.
Critics cite key arguments including: Bitcoin’s approximately 54% decline after its 2021 peak; according to Chainalysis historical data, declines in multiple cycles ranged from 30% to 80%. They also note that while institutional capital can reduce some volatility over the long term, it cannot eliminate Bitcoin’s sensitivity to macroeconomic shocks, interest rate changes, and geopolitical events. In the face of major negative events, institutional investors may also reduce their holdings, and this does not constitute systemic protection.
Saylor’s Supporting Points:
Critics’ Counterpoints:
Saylor’s Qualitative Framework:
Bitcoin as “digital gold,” with its long-term store of value function strengthening over time
Critics’ Qualitative Framework:
Bitcoin’s volatility persists; bear markets are driven by macro factors and are not entirely eliminated by demand structure changes
Saylor’s logic is that institutional investors hold longer, make more rational decisions, and are less prone to emotional sell-offs than retail investors. Once large institutions establish Bitcoin holdings, they typically do not exit due to short-term volatility. This effect can absorb some selling pressure, reducing the depth and speed of market crashes—though critics argue this is an improvement in degree, not a complete elimination of market risk.
According to Chainalysis data, Bitcoin has experienced declines of 30%–80% across multiple cycles, including about 54% after the 2021 peak. These historical figures are the main basis for critics’ skepticism of Saylor’s view—while each cycle’s lows may narrow as markets mature, significant price corrections have historically occurred multiple times.
Saylor’s long-term $1 million target is based on three main assumptions: increasing global adoption of Bitcoin, long-term fiat currency devaluation, and Bitcoin’s fixed supply. Critics point out that realizing these assumptions could take decades, during which regulatory changes, competition from other digital assets, and macroeconomic shocks could introduce significant uncertainties.
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