What happened
Saylor set out nine long-dated predictions for Bitcoin over the next decade in a post picked up by BeInCrypto on Sunday, per the outlet's article carrying the piece. The through-line: Bitcoin's value compounds because the protocol resists change, not despite it. He argued issuance, block size, and the base rules are features, not constraints waiting to be optimized. Strategy, the company he chairs, has anchored its corporate treasury on Bitcoin since 2020 and Saylor has used every major cycle turn to reset the narrative. This drop is in that lineage. It's not a technical roadmap. It's a philosophical stake in the ground.
The piece frames the next ten years around adoption by nation-states, corporates, and sovereigns holding Bitcoin as reserve collateral, alongside the argument that competing chains that iterate aggressively at the base layer are structurally disadvantaged. Saylor didn't attach a spot price target in the excerpt carried by BeInCrypto, which is a shift from the $13 million per coin figure he floated in prior appearances. That absence is worth noting.
Why it matters
Saylor's calls move markets in a way few other single voices do. Strategy holds one of the largest corporate BTC positions on record, and the company's balance sheet has become a proxy trade for Bitcoin exposure on U.S. equity screens. When he sets a ten-year frame, allocators listen, and so does crypto Twitter.
The timing is the interesting part. Ethereum and Solana pitches over the past twelve months have leaned hard on protocol evolution: rollup roadmaps, restaking primitives, throughput upgrades. Saylor's counter is that this is a weakness dressed as a strength. He's telling capital allocators that the chain worth owning is the one that won't change under them. That's a direct shot at the ETH-as-tech-stack narrative.
