Michael Saylor argues that Bitcoin is the strongest form of capital preservation ever created, stronger than real estate, gold, stocks, and cash, because it has no maintenance costs, no location risk, no corporate cycles, and no monetary expansion risk. He uses the analogy of royal families who never sell their crown jewels (like Windsor Castle) to illustrate that selling Bitcoin is the biggest financial mistake, as it permanently removes wealth that could preserve value for generations. Jack Mallers complements this by explaining that the S&P 500 at all-time highs is an illusion when measured in fiat currency, as it reflects nominal gains while real purchasing power declines. When measured against hard assets like Bitcoin or gold, traditional markets appear to be making lower and lower, revealing that the current financial system is losing its ability to preserve real value.
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Michael Saylor :"Important Warning To All Small Bitcoin & Crypto Investors" (New Prediction)Ajouté :
Michael Sailor says the biggest financial mistake you can make is selling your Bitcoin. And if he is right, most people are positioned completely wrong right now. Michael Sailor argues that Bitcoin is the strongest form of capital preservation ever created. Stronger than real estate, stronger than gold, stronger than stocks. His view is simple. You do not sell the asset that protects your wealth forever. You sell everything else. At the same time, Jack Malers is calling out something deeper. The financial system people rely on is breaking underneath the surface. Markets going up does not mean people are doing better.
Currencies are losing value. What looks like growth is often just inflation.
Both of them are pointing to the same shift. The current system is unstable and Bitcoin is emerging as the alternative. In this video, we break down why Sailor calls Bitcoin Cyber Manhattan, why Malers believes fiat distorts reality, and what this means for the future of wealth. And before we jump into it, just a quick reminder.
Only a small percentage of you watching are actually subscribed. If you're getting value from the videos, hit that subscribe button. It's free. It supports the channel and you can always change your mind later. Now, let's begin. The message I have really is the Bitcoin is a is a stronger form of capital preservation than your house, than a bar of gold, than a bunch of silver, >> than a stock, than an index, than a credit instrument, than a, you know, a stock of currency. All of those things are weaker. And when it comes time to sell something, sell something else.
Whatever the something else, you probably have crap in your life. I, you know, I'll see someone and they're like, I have a I have a sexy sports car. You know, that's got a halflife of seven years.
>> You know, Bitcoin will keep you well.
You know, you've got $200,000, you bought a sports car. Good for you.
You'll be wealthy for a decade.
You have $200,000, you buy Bitcoin, you'll be wealthy forever.
>> So, when it comes time to sell something, sell the thing that has a halflife of seven years or two years or 10 years or 20 years. Don't sell the thing that will make your children's children wealthy. Right? Bitcoin is gonna have economic value 500 years from now. It's the crown jewel.
>> Like the royal family of of Britain, they still own the center of Britain.
You know, >> the, you know, the royal the emperor of Japan still owns the middle of Tokyo.
And the royals in the UAE, they own all the good property. So own the stuff that's going to have value in a thousand years. They would never sell Windsor, you know, Windsor Castle, Buckingham Palace, you know, just like you're a New Yorker. Don't sell Central Park. I'm going to sell Central Park to make a dollar. It's like Jesus, it's worthwhile a thousand years from now. You might want to cultivate it. And Bitcoin, I think, is even more valuable than the nicest, most desirable real estate in your favorite place on Earth. Bitcoin is going to be around. It's cyber Manhattan. A thousand years from now, your children's children's great great 10x grandchildren will be rich if you kept it. And it, you know, >> and if they kept it, >> and if you sold it to buy a Ferrari, you know, it's like, oh yeah, my my great great great great grandfather had a very sexy horse and carriage. I could have been the richest guy in Florida, but my great great great grandfather wanted velvet in his horse and buggy, and he wanted a nice little bridal because he wanted to impress a girl. I'm like, dude, sell the horse and buggy. Keep the Bitcoin.
>> Michael Sailor frames Bitcoin as the strongest form of capital preservation in existence. And in this segment, he builds that argument by comparing it directly to every major asset people normally rely on. He starts with a clear hierarchy. Real estate, gold, silver, stocks, index funds, credit instruments, and cash all sit below Bitcoin in his view. The reason is not short-term performance, but long-term durability.
Real estate carries maintenance costs, taxes, and location risk. Stocks depend on corporate cycles and monetary conditions. Credit instruments are exposed to default and refinancing risk.
Cash loses value directly through monetary expansion. He then shifts to behavior, pointing out how people often trade long-term wealth for short-term satisfaction. His example of luxury cars is used to show how quickly value disappears in lifestyle purchases compared to assets that can compound over decades. Sailor's core idea is time preference. Selling Bitcoin represents a high time preference decision, while holding it represents long-term thinking. In his framing, the biggest financial mistake is not volatility or timing the market, but permanently removing yourself from an asset that may preserve value across generations. He extends this thinking further by comparing Bitcoin to historic forms of permanent wealth like royal property holdings that remain intact for centuries. The point is to show Bitcoin as something closer to generational capital than a tradable asset. The conclusion of his argument is simple. If Bitcoin is structurally stronger than every alternative, then selling it is not just a trade. It is a permanent reduction in long-term wealth potential.
And that is where the real risk begins.
>> If you live in uh Africa, there's not a single currency that works that holds its value. And the banks don't work very well. So if you're the Uber driver in Africa and someone wants to give you $50, if if they give you $50 of BTC, it's going to appreciate probably 20 30% 30% a year against the US dollar. And when your local currency loses 10% a year against the US dollar, if you give that uh you know when your currency is collapsing 20% a year, the halfife of your money is three years. So whatever I gave you is worthless in 10 years. So if you want to store economic energy, you have you have to get out of that collapsing system. Uh you can't buy any currency in a collapsing system. You can't buy a credit instrument or a bond in a collapsing system. You can't buy the real estate either because the real estate is a derivative of the currency.
And if no one's got any money in collapsing economy, they won't be able to pay the rent and the real estate won't have that much value.
>> Michael Sailor shifts the argument into real world currency collapse scenarios.
He focuses on what happens when money stops working properly in certain economies and why that changes how people think about value entirely. He points to regions where local currencies lose purchasing power quickly. In these environments, people can earn income but still fall behind because the currency itself is weakening against stronger global standards. Inflation becomes constant pressure and savings lose meaning over time. Sailor's argument is that traditional assets struggle in these conditions. Cash fails first because it is directly exposed to currency debasement. Bonds and credit instruments depend on stable governments and functioning financial systems which can break down under stress. Even real estate becomes unreliable when local demand disappears or when buyers no longer have access to stable money. He positions Bitcoin differently. It does not depend on any single country, bank or political system. It exists as a global network that can transfer value without relying on local infrastructure.
In this framing, Bitcoin becomes a form of economic energy that can move through unstable systems without losing its core properties. The key distinction is independence. Bitcoin does not require a functioning national currency to maintain value that separates it from every traditional asset class in his comparison. Sailor's conclusion is that as more economies experience instability, the need for assets outside the system increases. Bitcoin becomes less of a speculative trade and more of a necessity for preserving value across borders and time. And if you want to stay ahead of these signals and know exactly when the market's heating up or when it's giving you those rare buying windows, I break it down every day in the CryptoNutshell, my free 5-minute daily crypto newsletter. It's built to give you quick, actionable insights so you can make smarter decisions without spending hours buried in charts or headlines. You'll get clear signals on when to buy, when to take profits, and the latest news that could move markets all delivered straight to your inbox.
Just click the first link in the description, enter your email, and you're in. On the topic of Wall Street verse Main Street, take a look at this.
Consumer sentiment is in the orange. The price of the S&P is in blue. S&P 500 is flirting with all-time highs almost every single day. And consumer sentiment can just gets lower and lower and lower.
Alltime low, all-time low, alltime low.
And for me, this is the visual manifestation of what fiat does. This is why fiat is not money for the people.
This is why the system is broken. This is why we need to build something better. This is why Bitcoin is money for the people. Everyone gets the same rules. Nobody can seize anything. No one can censor anything. No one can inflate anything. Because what people need to understand is the S&P 500 at all-time highs is meaningless. Politicians used to parade around and remember the Dow's at 50,000. The S&P 500's at all-time highs. Look how well we're doing as a country or as a political party. It doesn't matter. The the stock market doesn't reflect the prosperity of the people. Clearly, we need a new system. We need a new we need to build something else. And mind you, I had to throw this in. If you price the S&P 500 in Bitcoin or in gold, because people will say, "Oh, you're just cherrypicking. Bitcoin started at zero, so clearly its performance is going to be better." Okay, gold's been around for thousands and thousands and thousands of years. What about the S&P 500 priced in that? Is that okay with you, tough guy?
S&P 500's getting crushed in both. So, mind you, everything you see in your life is an illusion. The S&P 500 at all-time highs in dollar terms is an illusion. It's like putting on drunk goggles. You don't drive drunk.
You'll crash.
You don't look at the world in fiat.
It's an illusion. It's fake. It's phony.
If you measure things in hard money, things that can't be printed, then the world starts to make sense. The S&P 500 is making lower after lower after lower against hard money.
Jack Malers opens this segment by focusing on a disconnect most people feel but rarely question. Markets are moving higher yet everyday economic sentiment keeps sliding lower. He highlights consumer sentiment sitting near historic lows while equity indexes continue pushing toward new highs, creating a gap between financial charts and lived reality. His argument is that this gap is not random. It is a direct outcome of how fiat systems operate.
Prices in financial markets can rise while real purchasing power declines underneath. That creates the appearance of prosperity even when many people feel left behind. He frames this as the visual distortion created by fiat money where nominal gains hide underlying erosion in value. Malers pushes the idea that traditional benchmarks like the S and P500 are misleading when viewed only in dollar terms. He argues that measuring performance purely in fiat hides a different reality when compared against harder assets like Bitcoin or gold. In those comparisons, traditional indexes lose significant ground over time, even if they appear strong in nominal terms. He extends this critique further by challenging the idea that market highs reflect broad economic health. In his view, political narratives often use stock market performance as proof of national success. But this does not reflect real wealth distribution or financial stability for most people. The core message is that fiat pricing creates an illusion of stability. When everything is measured in a currency that is constantly expanding in supply, it becomes difficult to see what is actually gaining or losing value in real terms. Malers concludes that once you shift the measurement system away from fiat and toward harder assets, the structure of the entire market changes.
What looks like strength begins to look like stagnation and what looks like volatility starts to resemble truth about value discovery in the system.
This is what pain before print looks like. So Bitcoin and gold they when you see these things sell off together that means the dollar is probably ripping.
The dollar is probably ripping and getting stronger because US yields are going up.
People are meeting margin calls.
Sovereigns are raising capital because there is an energy crisis. Think of Bitcoin and gold or hard money. These salailable 247 liquid markets as like the ATMs for the world. Like whenever they need cash, they go to these things.
Okay? That's why they react first.
That's why they're usually leading in market environments like this. And that's why they're selling off. And again, this to me is what winning looks like. This is the early chapters of what a $500,000 Bitcoin is. Bond markets are going to fall apart. Inflation is going to rip everyone's head off. They're going to have to print money. And this is you. If you're Bitcoin, you got to just hang on tight. Okay. Um, and I thought this point was interesting as well. It's unclear to me that we ever had a real bull market. So, as the economy starts to heat up. So, with hot inflation is hot economic data, um, the economy is starting to really warm up.
Now, it's not there quite yet, but you can see Bitcoin's correlation to strong economy. And I'm looking at PMI in particular, and PMI right now is at 52.
Um, this article, so I'll read straight from the article. This is from Anel Linder. He wrote, "Below is an image that I sent out on Twitter. I've talked about the fact that 2023 to 2025 might not have been an actual bull market at all. PMI being in contraction speaks to that possibility. If that's the case, PMI is expanding right now. So that should mean price has a tailwind to go higher. I believe this. If you look at Bitcoin in gold terms, 2023 to 2025 wasn't a bull market. We reached our previous all-time high, but we never really made a smashing new all-time high. So, I I don't think that the last quote unquote bull market was real. I've been in Bitcoin for almost 14 years at this point. This is nothing like the bull market postco. This was nothing nothing nothing like the bull market experienced in 2017. So, I believe this to be true. I'm I got my eyes on PMI and again I think as they print money as they continue to try and finance US government at the short end as these large massive companies roll their cash flows and raise money to pour into the real economy as opposed to equity buybacks I think the economy will heat up. I think Bitcoin is going to go to the moon.
Jack Malers continues by challenging how most people interpret financial performance. He argues that the entire perception of market strength changes depending on what you use as a measuring stick. When everything is priced in fiat currency, it can create a distorted sense of stability even when underlying value is shifting. He points out that the S&P 500 sitting near all-time highs is often used as proof of economic strength. Politicians and institutions highlight these numbers as evidence that the system is working. However, he argues this only holds true when the measurement unit itself is losing value over time. In feared terms, everything can appear to rise together even if real purchasing power is not improving.
Malers then reframes the discussion by introducing comparisons against harder forms of money like Bitcoin and gold.
When you measure traditional indexes against these assets, the long-term trend looks very different. Instead of steady growth, you begin to see erosion in value over time, which changes how the entire market narrative is interpreted. His broader point is that most people never switch measurement frameworks. They stay inside fiat pricing without realizing that the yard stick itself is moving. This leads to conclusions that may not reflect real economic conditions. He emphasizes that Bitcoin introduces a different standard because it cannot be inflated or manipulated in supply. that creates a fixed reference point that exposes long-term shifts in value across all other assets. The takeaway is that perception changes once you stop using fiat as the default lens. What once looked like growth can start to look like stagnation and what looked like stability can begin to reveal hidden decline.
Michael Sailor and Jack Malers are describing the same shift from two different angles. One focuses on time and structure. The other focuses on perception and measurement, but both arrive at the same conclusion. The current financial system is losing its ability to preserve real value. Sailor frames Bitcoin as the strongest long-term store of capital because it sits outside the mechanisms that weaken traditional assets. His view is built on durability across decades. Assets tied to governments, companies, or credit systems eventually face dilution, policy changes, or structural decay. Bitcoin avoids those dependencies entirely.
Malers focuses on how people perceive reality inside the system. He argues that most market signals are distorted because everything is priced in a currency that is constantly expanding.
This creates the illusion of growth even when purchasing power is eroding underneath. When measured against harder assets like Bitcoin or gold, that illusion starts to break. Together, their arguments point to a deeper transition. It is not just about Bitcoin outperforming other assets. It is about the measurement system itself changing.
Once the unit of account is questioned, every price in the system becomes harder to trust. The implication is that capital will continue to search for something more stable than fiat pricing.
Bitcoin becomes that reference point because it is not controlled by any single institution and cannot be expanded at will. If this shift continues, the gap between traditional assets and hard assets may not close gradually. It may widen as more capital begins to repric risk using a different standard entirely. Anyway guys, that's all we have for today.
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