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Just caught something interesting in the ongoing Bitcoin vs traditional assets debate. Michael Saylor from MicroStrategy dropped some pretty compelling numbers that completely reframe how we should be thinking about bitcoin performance over the past few years.
So here's the thing - there's been this back-and-forth between Saylor and gold advocate Peter Schiff about whether bitcoin actually delivers returns. Schiff pointed out that bitcoin only gained 12% over the last five years, meanwhile gold jumped 163% and silver went crazy at 181%. Sounds like a solid case against bitcoin, right? But Saylor pushed back with a different angle.
Instead of looking at the past five years, he shifted the timeline to August 2020 - the exact month MicroStrategy made its first major bitcoin move. That's when they bought 21,454 BTC and basically said we're going all-in on bitcoin as our treasury reserve. From that point forward, the math looks completely different. Bitcoin has averaged around 36% annual returns. Gold? 16%. Nasdaq? About 15%. S&P 500? Around 14%. That's a massive gap.
The core of this whole disagreement really comes down to which starting point you pick. Schiff's five-year window captures the period after bitcoin hit its all-time high in late 2021, so you're measuring during a correction phase. Saylor's August 2020 baseline marks an actual investment decision - a documented moment when a major publicly traded company committed to bitcoin as core treasury strategy. It's not arbitrary; it's a real inflection point.
MicroStrategy's current position tells you something about their conviction too. They're holding 762,099 bitcoin now, average cost around $35,160 per coin. On paper that's worth roughly $57.4 billion at current valuations, though they're sitting on an unrealized loss of about $5.95 billion from their total purchase price. But they keep buying even when prices dip. That's dollar-cost averaging on steroids.
Obviously this doesn't mean bitcoin is risk-free. The volatility is real - we've seen 70%+ drawdowns from peaks. If you need your money in the next year or two, bitcoin probably isn't your asset. But if you've got the stomach for wild price swings and a genuinely long time horizon, the historical returns have more than compensated for that volatility.
The broader point here is that institutional investors are increasingly looking at bitcoin not as some speculative gamble but as an actual portfolio component. MicroStrategy's case study gives them a tangible example of what conviction-driven adoption can look like over a multi-year period. The debate about appropriate measurement baselines will keep going, but the data Saylor laid out definitely shifts the conversation away from whether bitcoin works to more nuanced questions about timing, risk tolerance, and investment horizon.
Worth watching how this plays out as more institutions evaluate their treasury strategies. The bitcoin narrative keeps evolving.