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Michael Saylor Declares Bitcoin’s Historic Halving Cycle Obsolete Amid Institutional Tsunami

Michael Saylor Declares Bitcoin’s Historic Halving Cycle Obsolete Amid Institutional Tsunami

CointribuneEN
Release Time:
2026-07-06 07:20:00
0

Bitcoin is entering a new era that shatters its sacred four-year halving cycle, MicroStrategy’s Michael Saylor warned in a bold July 2026 statement. Long considered heresy by purists, Saylor argues that the influx of institutional giants and evolving market structure have stripped the supply-cut event of its singular price-driving power. The classic narrative—that halvings automatically trigger exponential rallies—is losing relevance as trillions in traditional finance flood the space, fundamentally altering Bitcoin’s demand dynamics.

Saylor buries Bitcoin's 4-year cycle.

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In Brief

  • Michael Saylor believes that Bitcoin’s historic four-year cycle is no longer the main driver of its evolution.
  • The massive arrival of institutional investors and ETFs deeply alters the mechanisms of Bitcoin price formation.
  • The balance sheets of companies, investment funds, and states are gradually taking over from miners in driving the market dynamics.
  • This new dependence on global financial flows could replace bitcoin’s old cycles with cycles linked to liquidity and macroeconomics.

The obsolescence of the halving as the market compass

While the crypto market has just bounced back, Michael Saylor, Executive Chairman of Strategy, published on July 5 a post on the social network X where he outlines a major theoretical break regarding Bitcoin price modeling.

The man at the head of a company whose treasury strategy led him to accumulate a colossal total of 846,842 BTC, after surviving the 2022 crisis when the asset fell below the $16,000 threshold, bluntly states that the historical dynamic has changed.

To understand the foundations of this analysis, several factual elements and direct statements must be put into perspective :

  • The rejection of the historical model based on mining specialists : without denying the halving’s algorithmic mechanism, the leader questions its capacity to govern the market’s overall direction, and states that “the four-year cycle is no longer the dominant model” ;
  • A long-term confirmed transition : this stance confirms earlier statements made by Saylor as of April 4, where he already stated that “the four-year cycle is dead” from the moment the asset obtained global recognition as digital capital ;
  • The new valuation driver : the relative importance of the daily production of new tokens diminishes in the face of financial forces of a completely different scale, which he summarizes by predicting “that over the next decade, bitcoin’s trajectory will be less dictated by the emission of mining companies and more by capital flows”.

This invalidation of the traditional model is explained by a fundamental shift of the network’s economic center of gravity, moving from a market historically governed by supply to a market governed by demand. Previously, scheduled reductions in token emissions by mining companies caused mechanical supply shocks which, combined with retail investor speculation, triggered successive phases of euphoria and crashes.

Today, daily volumes and capital injected by institutional players far exceed the selling or producing pressure of mining farms, thus altering the price discovery structure.

The era of balance sheets and new drivers of global liquidity

The emergence of this new paradigm shifts financial analysis from observing individual wallets to meticulous examination of large-scale accounting structures. Thus, the thesis defended by Strategy’s Executive Chairman is based on the irreversible integration of bitcoin within global capital markets. The development of sophisticated allocation channels such as constant flows from exchange-traded funds (ETFs), adoption by corporate treasuries of listed companies, and the creation of sovereign reserves transform the very nature of demand.

Hence, the market no longer depends on accumulation based on the number of physical buyers, but on the exposure of large institutional balance sheets. Michael Saylor particularly emphasizes this shift by stating: “this is the next phase of bitcoin adoption: not just more buyers, but more balance sheets”.

This institutionalization is accompanied by the gradual integration of the asset within traditional and digital credit structures. The emergence of sophisticated derivatives markets, the interest of insurance companies, and the use of bitcoin as collateral transform the asset into a major component of global savings. The price no longer evolves in isolation under the exclusive influence of the crypto ecosystem but now reacts to injections of macroeconomic liquidity, risk appetite of fund managers, and interest rate arbitrage conducted by major global investment banks.

Resilience in the face of macroeconomic test of strength

This shift to a financial flow model implies major uncertainties about the network’s long-term stability. Indeed, unlike the mathematical and predictable rigidity of the halvings, the sustainability of institutional flows remains dependent on global credit crises and central bank policies. The uncertainty lies in these capitals’ ability to remain anchored during stock market panic phases or tightening of international regulations. Moreover, the growing interconnection with traditional finance exposes the asset to risks of systemic volatility completely exogenous to its original code.

Beyond external pressures, the protocol itself faces internal vulnerabilities that governance must monitor with utmost rigor. Michael Saylor issued an explicit warning on this topic, reminding that the most critical threat to the ecosystem does not come from market fluctuations, but rather “from bad ideas leading to harmful protocol changes”. Bitcoin is therefore passing through a complex transitional phase where its supply remains algorithmically fixed, while the evolution of its demand structure and internal governance enter a testing ground against global finance standards.

Evaluating these prospects requires a nuanced approach, free from determinism. If factual data demonstrate a loss of influence of mining companies’ activity, bitcoin’s increasing dependence on Wall Street capital could simply replace old cycles with new ones linked to institutional credits.

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