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Michael Saylor's talk on Bitcoin's 'Valley of Despair'... Recovery strategies after a 45% correction
Michael Saylor recently described Bitcoin’s 45% decline not as a simple market correction but as an essential rite of passage that all successful technology investments must go through. As CEO of MicroStrategy and one of Bitcoin’s largest individual holders, he argues that the current downturn could actually mark the beginning of long-term success.
The Necessary Process of Technological Innovation… Why Michael Saylor Uses Apple as an Example
The comparison Michael Saylor often references is Apple. In 2013, Apple’s stock price plummeted 45% from its peak, and its price-to-earnings ratio (PER) fell below 10, branding it as a “declining cash-generating company with no future.” At that time, the iPhone was already an essential device for over a billion people, but market confidence had not yet caught up.
“Among successful tech investments, there’s really no case of enduring a 45% drop without passing through a valley of despair,” Saylor said on a podcast. It took about seven years, supported by major investors like Carl Icahn and Warren Buffett, for Apple to fully recover from its previous high valuation. Currently, Bitcoin has been adjusted from its all-time high of around $125,000 to approximately $67,380 (as of March 2026).
Saylor admits it’s difficult to predict how long this correction will last. “So far, it’s been 137 days, but it could take two years, three years, or even as long as seven years,” he explained.
Structural Changes in the Derivatives Market Are Suppressing Bitcoin Volatility
Saylor attributes this cycle’s differences from past cycles to structural market changes. As derivatives trading shifts from over-the-counter (OTC) markets abroad to regulated U.S. markets, volatility is being compressed on both sides.
Previously, Bitcoin could have dropped as much as 80% in a worst-case scenario, but under current structural constraints, a 40-50% correction is considered the worst-case scenario. At the same time, traditional banks refusing to extend credit against Bitcoin holdings has led some investors into shadow finance or re-pledging structures. This creates structural risks that could induce artificial selling pressure during stressful periods.
According to Saylor’s analysis, when Bitcoin suddenly dropped from $70,000 to $60,000 on February 5, blockchain analytics firm Glassnode reported a $3.2 billion single-day loss. This was the largest single-day loss in Bitcoin history, excluding the Terra-Luna collapse.
Quantum Computing Is Just Market Fear… Michael Saylor’s FUD Assessment
Recent concerns about Bitcoin’s security have centered on quantum computing threats and past controversies involving certain developers. However, Saylor views these as variations of the recurring “fear, uncertainty, doubt (FUD).”
He states that quantum computing is not an immediate threat and that it would take at least 10 years to pose a real risk. By then, governments, financial institutions, consumers, and defense systems are likely to have transitioned to post-quantum cryptography.
Saylor believes Bitcoin’s software will evolve accordingly, and if necessary, node operators, exchanges, and hardware providers will implement upgrades through broad global consensus. “Trustworthy quantum innovation will require collaborative upgrades across Bitcoin and all digital systems worldwide,” he emphasized.
Ultimately, Saylor’s core message is clear: the current 45% correction is a “valley of despair” that all innovative technologies must pass through, and resisting the recurring narratives of fear from the past is the role of long-term investors.