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Bitcoin permabull and Strategy Executive Chairman Michael Saylor said he believes BTC may have already formed a price bottom near $60,000 in early February, while also downplaying concerns that quantum computing could pose an imminent risk to the network.
Speaking at a recent Mizuho investor event, Saylor said BTC established a bottom around the $60,000 level in early February. He argued that market declines typically end when forced selling runs its course, rather than when investor sentiment starts to recover.
In his view, the recent downturn was driven largely by over-leveraged miners and weaker market participants being forced to sell. As that excess supply is absorbed, Saylor said market dynamics should begin to stabilize.
He cited several factors that could help cushion further downside, including sustained spot exchange-traded fund (ETF) inflows, expectations of improving liquidity, and increasing corporate treasury adoption. Saylor added that the market is starting to look more bullish as selling pressure appears to fade while demand continues to build.
Bitcoin has rebounded to trade above $70,000 after sliding to roughly $67,000 earlier in the week. The recovery was partly attributed to a temporary U.S.–Iran ceasefire, which eased geopolitical tensions and contributed to downward pressure on oil prices.
As of writing, BTC was trading around $71,034, down 1.2% on the day.
On quantum computing, Saylor argued that the perceived risks are exaggerated. He said any credible quantum threat would likely emerge gradually, giving the network time to adapt.
Saylor also pointed to Bitcoin’s open-source design, saying developers could implement quantum-resistant upgrades ahead of any feasible attacks.
Not all researchers share Saylor’s level of confidence. The article notes that researchers at Google have cautioned that quantum computers capable of breaking elliptic-curve cryptography—used in Bitcoin wallet digital signatures—could arrive sooner than anticipated. That warning has intensified debate over how urgently the industry needs to shift to new cryptographic standards.

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