Michael Saylor is making the case for Bitcoin (BTC) with a history lesson. The MicroStrategy chairman shared River research tracking over 60 government currencies since 1700. His point is simple. Paper money keeps failing, and Bitcoin was built to fix that.
River, a Bitcoin financial services firm, published the chart this week. It claims the average fiat currency lasts just 27 years.
326 Years of Fiat History Behind Saylor’s Bitcoin Pitch
The chart tells a grim story. Dozens of currencies died in hyperinflation, defined by economists Steve Hanke and Nicholas Krus as prices rising by more than 50% in a month.
Germany’s papiermark (or Paper Mark) went that way in 1923. Hungary’s pengő followed in 1946, when prices doubled roughly every 15 hours. Zimbabwe’s dollar collapsed in 2008.
The survivors did not do much better. The US dollar has lost 97% of its buying power. The British pound is down 99.7%, and the Japanese yen 99.9%. Even the euro, the youngest and best performer, has lost 44% since 1999.
River is upfront about the chart’s limits. It calls the data a representative sample, not a census, and notes many pre-1971 currencies had partial gold backing. That year gets its own dashed line, marking when the dollar cut its final tie to gold.
“Fiat currency is the problem. Companies, institutions, securities, and technologies that strengthen Bitcoin are part of the solution. We can debate ideas without mistaking allies for enemies,” Saylor commented.
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Notably, Michael Saylor’s next-decade Bitcoin outlook calls the pioneer crypto a digital property whose strength lies in its base layer barely changing. He sees Bitcoin as scarce global capital for final settlement, not mainly for everyday payments.
His bigger bet is that Bitcoin will support a new financial system built on digital capital, credit, and money.
River Says Most Cryptocurrencies Fail the Same Test
River’s warning is not just about fiat. The firm says the average cryptocurrency does not even last a year. Nearly all of them fall to zero when priced in Bitcoin.
“All of these currencies suffer from the same problem: Centralized power and an infinite money supply. Bitcoin was designed to outlast all fiat currency,” the firm said in its post.
Meanwhile, not everyone agrees that Bitcoin’s design is settled. StarkWare CEO Eli Ben-Sasson recently challenged Bitcoin’s fixed cap, arguing lost keys will shrink the usable supply forever.
Chainalysis estimated that up to 3.79 million BTC were already unrecoverable by 2017. Supporters rejected his 4% issuance fix, since 95.5% of all Bitcoin now exists.
The market adds a twist to Saylor’s pitch. Bitcoin trades near $63,252, down about 47% in a year.
MicroStrategy still holds 843,775 BTC, the largest corporate stash, even after selling 3,588 BTC this month, its biggest sale since 2022.
History says fiat money fades. The coming months will test whether investors still believe Bitcoin is the escape.
The post MicroStrategy’s Saylor Pitches Bitcoin Bull Case With 300 Years of Fiat History appeared first on BeInCrypto.

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