Saylor Says Bitcoin Winter Is Over at $78,000; Analysts See Nation-State Adoption as the Next Catalyst
Key Takeaways
Michael Saylor declared "winter's over" for Bitcoin as it held above $78,000, but analysts are divided on whether the recent downturn qualified as a full crypto winterMati Greenspan argues the slump was "a large pullback within a broader bull market" rather than a true winter, and says Bitcoin has likely already bottomedGreenspan identifies nation-state adoption -- central banks adding Bitcoin to reserves alongside gold -- as the next major price driver beyond institutional buyingJason Fernandes cautioned that even if Bitcoin's winter is over, "it is still very cold for altcoins"Government Bitcoin holdings are already building: the US holds roughly 300,000 BTC, China approximately 190,000 BTC, the UK around 61,000 BTC, and El Salvador is accumulating toward a 7,500 BTC treasury target
Michael Saylor, executive chairman of Strategy and the most prominent corporate Bitcoin accumulator in the market, declared the crypto winter over on Thursday as Bitcoin held above $78,000 -- a level first reached on April 22. The proclamation, delivered via a Game of Thrones-style image on X, sparked immediate debate among analysts about whether the recent downturn even qualified as a winter in the first place.
Strategy's total Bitcoin holdings currently stand at 780,897 BTC following the firm's most recent purchase of 13,927 Bitcoin, reinforcing Saylor's signal that he sees current prices as an attractive entry point rather than a risk to manage.
Was It Ever Really a Winter?
For Mati Greenspan, founder of Quantum Economics and former senior market analyst at eToro, the framing of a crypto winter mischaracterizes what markets actually experienced. The downturn followed the October 10 flash crash, which triggered roughly $19 billion in forced liquidations within 24 hours, but Greenspan does not view the subsequent decline as a structural bear market.
"I'm not sure I would classify what we just saw as a crypto winter exactly," Greenspan said. "More of a large pullback within a broader bull market." He added that he broadly agrees with the directional implication of Saylor's statement. "Yes, I think it is very likely that we have seen the bottom," Greenspan said.
Jason Fernandes, market analyst and co-founder of AdLunam, offered a more cautious read. "Even if the winter is over for bitcoin, which I don't agree with, it is still very cold for altcoins," he said -- a view consistent with on-chain data showing altcoin season metrics still well below levels that signal broad market participation.
Nation-State Adoption: The Fourth and Final Cycle
Where Greenspan parts ways with Saylor is on what drives the next leg higher. While Saylor's ongoing purchases signal confidence in institutional demand as the primary catalyst, Greenspan argues that institutional adoption is only part of the story -- and that the more transformative driver is still ahead.
"Yes, increased institutional adoption will kick off this next leg, but what Saylor is missing is the nation-state adoption, which is undoubtedly right around the corner," Greenspan said.
Greenspan frames Bitcoin's adoption history as four distinct cycles. The first was driven by early adopters in 2013, followed by the mass retail awakening of 2017, then institutional adoption beginning in 2021. The fourth cycle, he argues, will be defined by sovereign adoption -- central banks adding Bitcoin to their balance sheets alongside gold as a reserve asset.
"Imagine central banks adding bitcoin to their balance sheets to maintain price stability, similar to how they've added gold in the past," Greenspan said, adding that Trump's second term has accelerated the timeline. "The fourth and final major driver is nation-state adoption, which I believe will happen very soon, especially with the US abruptly flipping course during President Donald Trump's second term."
Sovereign Accumulation Already Underway
The nation-state adoption thesis is not purely theoretical. The US government currently holds approximately 300,000 BTC, with plans for a strategic Bitcoin reserve that remain neither formalized nor fully operational. El Salvador continues a daily Bitcoin purchase program targeting a 7,500 BTC treasury. China and the UK hold approximately 190,000 BTC and 61,000 BTC respectively, largely through seized assets. At the sub-sovereign level, US states including Wisconsin and New Jersey have introduced Bitcoin exposure within public pension fund allocations.
If Greenspan's cycle thesis is correct, the institutional phase now underway may be the setup for a sovereign accumulation wave that would represent a structural shift in how Bitcoin is held, valued, and integrated into global reserve frameworks.