What One Billionaire Knows About Outlasting a Dollar Collapse | Michael Saylor
Michael Saylor explains why Bitcoin is the engineered successor to gold and why currency decay is a near-certain lifetime risk.
Overview
Michael Saylor traces his path from running a plateaued enterprise software company to converting its entire cash reserve into Bitcoin in 2020. He argues that all sovereign currencies degrade to near zero over decades, that gold is imperfect money inflating at roughly 2% annually, and that Bitcoin is an engineered monetary protocol designed to be thermodynamically sound, incorruptible, and permanent. The conversation covers his intellectual formation, his investment instincts, and the mechanics of why he believes Bitcoin solves the store-of-value problem that no prior asset has fully solved.
Key takeaways
The best currency of the last century, the US dollar, lost 99.9% of its value — roughly 7% annual inflation compounded.
Gold inflates at about 2% per year as miners expand supply, cutting its real value in half every 36 years.
Bitcoin is an ideology materialized as a protocol: a fault-tolerant, decentralized network no single actor can corrupt or shut down.
The 2020 COVID response bifurcated Main Street and Wall Street, creating hyperinflation in financial assets while destroying operating businesses.
Winner-take-all digital monopolies emerge because software delivered over a network has near-zero marginal cost and compounds network effects globally.
Worth quoting
"The winning currency of the 20th century, the best currency in the world, lost 99.9% of its value. That's a winner."
"We don't trust the government. We don't trust a local bank. We don't trust each other. And we want the bank to last for a thousand years."
"Your storehouse of value, whatever it is, is going to be deflated terribly during your lifetime."
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