Updated February 25, 2026.
Michael Saylor argues that Bitcoin is going through what is called the Bitcoin Valley of Despair, similar to what Apple experienced in 2013: a significant price drop, a pessimistic sentiment, and a market struggling to recognize its long-term potential. The point is not to predict an immediate rebound, but to explain why, according to Strategy’s chairman, the most uncomfortable phases often precede the most significant revaluation cycles.
CoinDesk revived this analogy after an interview with Saylor on Coin Stories. The context is well-known: Bitcoin remains below recent highs, and macro pressures (real interest rates, liquidity, regulatory risk, and tariff narratives) continue to weigh on multiples and flows.
The Bitcoin Valley of Despair: What Saylor Means
In his view, major technology assets do not move in a straight line. Before the market fully recognizes a long-term thesis, there is often a prolonged period of stagnation characterized by price declines, volatility, and loss of confidence. Saylor cites the example of Apple after 2013: a significant drop in the stock price from its highs, compressed multiples, and a narrative of “end of growth,” followed by years of recovery and revaluation.
Applied to BTC, the concept is simple: the price may remain weak even as the adoption thesis continues to develop. This is why Saylor insists that a 40โ50% drawdown would not be an anomaly for a high-growth asset, but a phase already seen in other technology cycles.
Why the Comparison to Apple Divides the Market
The analogy works on a psychological level, less so on a strictly fundamental one. In 2013, Apple had classic corporate metrics (earnings, buybacks, margins, multiples) and a dominant consumer product. Bitcoin is a digital monetary asset with different dynamics: a fixed supply, cyclical demand, derivative leverage, and a strong dependence on global macroeconomic conditions.
For this reason, some crypto desks consider the analogy useful only as a narrative framework, not as a quantitative model. In other words, it helps to understand the phase, but does not provide timing for a reversal. On CryptoRoad, we addressed a similar topic in our guide on risk psychology and overtrading, where the central point is to separate strategic conviction from tactical risk management.
What Changes for Those Following BTC in 2026
Operationally, the “valley of despair” thesis implies three practical consequences. The first: avoid interpreting every bounce as a definitive reversal. The second: do not confuse a long-term view with an aggressive sizing in the short term. The third: monitor objective signals (ETF flows, open interest, funding, credit spreads, strength of the dollar) instead of focusing solely on the narrative.
In the short term, those in the Bitcoin valley of despair must also deal with the political and commercial risks in the United States, including the uncertainty surrounding tariffs. This explains why the current phase may remain “noisy” even without a single dominant event. If you want to contextualize the technical aspects of the cycle, you may find our guide on Bitcoin mining economics and the one on spot ETFs and flows helpful.
The Critical Point: Time and Capital Preservation
The most important part of Saylor’s thesis is the timeframe: even if the long-term bullish scenario is confirmed, the market may take months or years to price it in. This changes the way exposure is built. In practice, capital preservation and risk discipline are more important than a perfect prediction of the bottom.
For retail investors, the issue is twofold: strategy and structure. Strategy means defining goals, time horizon, and acceptable loss threshold. Structure means storing assets securely, reducing operational errors, and maintaining liquidity to avoid being forced to sell at the worst times. Our guide on self-custody, passphrase, and multisig is also helpful here.
In Summary
| Element | Key Data |
|---|---|
| Saylor’s Thesis | Bitcoin in a “valley of despair” similar to historical phases of Apple |
| Drawdown Magnitude | 40โ50% range discussed in the comparison with Apple’s 2013 |
| Operational Message | Do not seek perfect timing: prioritize risk management and time horizon |
| Risks in the Short Term | Restrictive macro environment, derivative leverage, political/commercial uncertainty |
| What to Monitor | ETF flows, open interest, funding, credit spreads, strength of the dollar |
Sources
- CoinDesk, February 24,
