Michael Saylor has long championed Bitcoin as a digital gold standard, and his latest remarks reinforce that view. He says the protocol’s technical evolution is only one piece of the puzzle; the real growth comes from how the world treats Bitcoin as a reserve asset. Institutional investors, from tech giants to sovereign funds, are increasingly allocating capital to the cryptocurrency, and this trend is expected to accelerate as global inflation concerns persist.

Despite the “extreme fear” sentiment that currently dominates the market, Bitcoin’s price is holding at roughly $63,100, with a modest 0.6 % gain over the past 24 hours. This stability suggests that, while short‑term volatility is high, the underlying demand—especially from corporate treasuries—remains resilient. For retail holders, this means that a cautious, long‑term approach could still be justified even when market mood is sour.

What will matter next is how regulatory bodies respond to the growing institutional footprint and whether central banks adjust their monetary stances. A shift in policy could either reinforce Bitcoin’s role as a hedge or trigger a sharper pullback. Watching these developments will help investors gauge whether the “greatest evolution” Saylor talks about is about to materialise.