Michael Saylor argued that Bitcoinβs inability to sustain the most aggressive upside forecasts is less about a broken long-term thesis and more about a credit-market bottleneck: a large share of Bitcoin wealth still canβt be financed cleanly inside the traditional banking system, pushing holders toward βshadowβ venues where rehypothecation creates effective selling pressure.
In a Feb. 27 interview with Coin Stories host Nathalie Brunell, Saylor said the market has matured in ways that naturally damp both upside and downside volatility as derivatives migrate βfrom offshore to onshoreβ and regulated US markets grow. But he placed the sharper brake on price in the plumbing of credit. Banks, he argued, are moving slowly to recognize Bitcoin as collateral, and that delay matters when the asset base is large.
Saylor framed the current top-of-market structure as roughly β$2 trillion worth of Bitcoin,β with βprobably $1.8 trillion held by retail investors or offshore investorsβ who βcannot access the traditional banking system.β The practical implication, he said, is that Bitcoin holders who want to unlock liquidity face a narrow menu compared with traditional equity portfolios.
βIf I posted $10 million of Apple stock with JP Morgan or Morgan Stanley, I could take a $5 million loan at SOFR plus 50 basis points and I could spend it,β Saylor said. βBut you canβt even post $10 million worth of Bitcoin with JP Morgan or Morgan Stanley right now. Therefore, you canβt take a loan. Therefore, you have to go to a shadow banking system. You have to go offshore.β
That constraint, he argued, forces holders into behavior that mechanically caps upside. The βsafe wayβ to monetize is simply to sell, which βdamps the upside.β The next option is borrowing from a small pool of crypto lenders that donβt rehypothecate collateral, but Saylor described that market as both expensive and shallowββa few billion dollars probablyββwith rates he characterized as closer to βSOFR plus 400β or βplus 500 basis points,β rather than traditional prime-style spreads.
He pointed to a newer channel, banks extending credit against spot Bitcoin ETFs like BlackRockβs iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT), but described it as early, limited, and still costly versus conventional secured lending.
The most controversial pathway, Saylor said, is where the cheapest funding appears: counterparties offering low-rate Bitcoin-backed credit in exchange for control of the collateral. βIβve had people offer me Bitcoin-backed credit at 1% or 0%,β he said, before emphasizing the trade-off. βThereβs always the catch [β¦] they want me to transfer the Bitcoin to them so they can rehypothecate it.β
Saylor then tied rehypothecation directly to spot-market suppression, arguing that collateral handed to intermediaries can be effectively βsoldβ multiple times through reuse. βSo, if you have $10 million [β¦] you can get a 3 or 4% loan, but then it gets rehypothecated,β he said. βSo, your $10 million of Bitcoin gets sold once, gets sold twice, gets sold three times [β¦] You might actually create $30 or $40 million worth of selling because the Bitcoin that you posted [β¦] rehypothecated it three times.β
Michael Saylor: Shadow banking βrehypothecationβ suppresses Bitcoin price
On February 27, 2026, in an interview with Natalie Brunell, Michael Saylor discussed why Bitcoin failed to surpass $126,000.
He suggested that the exclusion of Bitcoin from traditional banks like JP⦠pic.twitter.com/ODpOEvhi2j
β Wu Blockchain (@WuBlockchain) March 4, 2026
In his view, the missing piece is a large, regulated, non-rehypothecating credit system for Bitcoinβone that looks more like mainstream securities financing. βWhatβs holding down the price? I think what holds down the price of the asset is the lack of a fully formed nonrehypothecating credit system,β he said, adding that rehypothecation βdamps the volβ and can amplify moves on both sides through leveraged positioning.
Saylorβs bottom line was timing, not thesis: if banks take βfour years, 5 years, 6 yearsβ to βbank itβ in the full sense, then Bitcoinβs price discovery will continue to be shaped by a shadow-credit workaround that can manufacture synthetic supply. If and when conventional credit rails mature around Bitcoin collateral without aggressive rehypothecation, he suggested, the market may rely less on forced selling and more on ordinary secured borrowing, potentially changing the ceiling on upside cycles.
At press time, Bitcoin traded at $72,236.

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