How often does a chance to buy into a potential goldmine come with a neon sign flashing “steal of the century”?
Michael Saylor, the vocal Bitcoin advocate and head of MicroStrategy, seems to think that’s exactly what’s blinking right now, with Bitcoin trading under $100,000.
As of April 25, 2025, with BTC hovering at about $94,500, Saylor’s voice cuts through the market noise like a foghorn on a quiet harbor night.
He’s calling this price a rare bargain, a ticket to ride before the rocket—potentially—blasts past six figures.
Could this be the moment, or just another hype wave crashing on skeptical shores?
Saylor’s confidence is almost palpable, like the hum of a revving engine.
He’s predicted Bitcoin will smash through $100,000, maybe even by late 2024 or as a New Year’s Eve surprise.
No looking back, he says—don’t expect a nosedive below $60,000.
He’s even planning a “$100K party,” a celebration that smells of champagne and digital ambition.
Yet, while his bullishness energizes traders, both big institutional players and small retail folks, there’s a whisper of doubt.
What if the market plays a cruel trick, flipping the script on this digital dream?
The blockchain technology ensures every transaction is verified by thousands of computers, making Bitcoin’s network virtually tamper-proof.
Contrast this with old-school thinking—gold, the shiny relic of stability, versus Bitcoin, the “apex property” Saylor champions.
He argues it’s a superior store of value, capped at 21 million coins, a scarcity as stark as a desert horizon.
With global adoption rising, he sees prices soaring like a kite in a storm.
Following Trump’s election victory, Saylor views the political shift as a massive boost for Bitcoin’s future political shift boost.
MicroStrategy, now Strategy, mirrors his faith, hoarding over 538,000 BTC by April 2025, buying with cash, debt, whatever it takes.
It’s a bold bet, unlike anything traditional finance would dare.
Since 2020, Strategy has spent over $25.6 billion on Bitcoin acquisitions massive Bitcoin investment.