07/07/2026 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 07/07/2026 05:40
Strategy CEO Michael Saylor has characterized the world's largest cryptocurrency Bitcoin, as "digital energy," emphasizing its ability to store value more effectively than traditional assets.
He believes Bitcoin's scarcity, portability, and resistance to manipulation positions it as a next-generation financial asset capable of safeguarding wealth over the long term.
In a post on X, he wrote,
Register for Tekedia Mini-MBA edition 20 (June 8 - Sept 5, 2026).
Register for Tekedia AI in Business Masterclass.
Join Tekedia Capital Syndicate and co-invest in great global startups.
Register for Nigeria Capital Market Masterclass.
"Bitcoin is digital energy".
This was posted alongside a detailed chart highlighting MicroStrategy's substantial Bitcoin holdings as of July 5, 2026. The visualization shows the company controls 847,363 BTC with a total reserve value of $53.06 billion.
This reflects 113 purchase events, an average acquisition cost of $75,653 per Bitcoin, and a current unrealized position down approximately 17.24%.
The chart maps Bitcoin's price trajectory alongside orange bubbles representing individual purchase sizes and a green line tracking the average purchase price over time, underscoring MicroStrategy's long-term accumulation strategy amid market volatility.
Saylor's statement reinforces his long-held belief that Bitcoin represents a revolutionary form of energy portable, verifiable, and resistant to degradation.
Far from a speculative gamble, the Strategy CEO treats these acquisitions as the accumulation of digital energy that can be stored indefinitely and transferred across borders without friction.
At its core, Saylor's framing draws an analogy between Bitcoin and energy itself. Traditional energy sources like oil or electricity power physical machines, but Bitcoin powers the digital economy by securing value, enabling trustless transactions, and acting as a battery for human productivity.
Unlike fiat currencies that lose purchasing power through inflation, Bitcoin's fixed supply of 21 million coins creates scarcity akin to conserved energy. Once mined, this energy cannot be created anew or arbitrarily diluted by central authorities.
This perspective explains MicroStrategy's aggressive Bitcoin strategy. By converting cash reserves into BTC, the company effectively transforms depreciating fiat into an asset designed to appreciate as adoption grows.
The volatility visible in the chart-dips and surges-becomes secondary to the long-term trajectory. Saylor has consistently argued that holding Bitcoin is like storing energy in its purest, most efficient digital form, one that survives political instability, currency devaluation, and technological disruption.
Critics often dismiss Bitcoin for its energy consumption during mining, yet Saylor flips the narrative. Mining converts real-world electricity into an immutable ledger entry, creating something far more valuable than the input.
In an article on X, titled "Bitcoin evolves by not changing", Saylor says Bitcoin's greatest evolution over the next decade will come from changing less at the protocol layer and mattering more everywhere else.
He adds that the base layer will harden, the capital markets will deepen, the applications will expand, and the world will build on Bitcoin.
This "digital energy" can then be moved instantly anywhere in the world, settled in minutes, and verified by anyone. In an era of increasing digitalization, from AI to global finance, Bitcoin serves as the monetary layer that underpins secure value exchange.
Saylor's message resonates because it aligns with observable trends. Institutional adoption continues to accelerate, with companies and governments exploring Bitcoin as a treasury asset or strategic reserve.
The chart of MicroStrategy's holdings serves as both proof and blueprint of disciplined accumulation through market cycles yields substantial reserves of this digital energy.
As Bitcoin matures, Saylor's statement highlights the crypto asset unique properties, decentralization, scarcity, portability, and verifiability that distinguish it from all prior forms of money.
In this view, holding Bitcoin is not merely investing, it is participating in the creation of a new energy standard for the digital age.