March 06, 2026
ChainGPT
Saylor: Shadow Financing and Rehypothecation Are Capping Bitcoin’s Rally
Michael Saylor says Bitcoin’s upside is being choked—not by a failed long-term thesis, but by a credit-market bottleneck that forces holders into shadow financing where rehypothecation creates effective selling pressure.
In a Feb. 27 interview on Coin Stories with Natalie Brunell, Saylor argued that the market has matured—derivatives are moving “from offshore to onshore” and U.S. regulation is growing—so both upside and downside volatility should naturally decline. But the sharper drag on price, he said, is plumbing: banks remain slow to accept Bitcoin as clean collateral, leaving a large portion of the asset base outside conventional credit rails.
Saylor framed the current market as roughly $2 trillion of Bitcoin, with “probably $1.8 trillion held by retail investors or offshore investors” who “cannot access the traditional banking system.” That exclusion matters, he said, because it leaves Bitcoin holders far fewer, more expensive, and riskier ways to unlock liquidity than holders of traditional securities.
“If I posted $10 million of Apple stock with JP Morgan or Morgan Stanley, I could take a $5 million loan at SOFR plus 50 basis points and I could spend it,” Saylor said. “But you can’t even post $10 million worth of Bitcoin with JP Morgan or Morgan Stanley right now. Therefore, you can’t take a loan. Therefore, you have to go to a shadow banking system. You have to go offshore.”
Those alternatives, he explained, create mechanical selling pressure that caps rallies. The simplest route—selling—directly dampens the upside. Borrowing from licensed crypto lenders is possible, but Saylor described that market as shallow and costly—“a few billion dollars probably”—with borrowing costs nearer SOFR plus 400–500 basis points rather than the prime-style spreads available for equities. Lending secured by spot Bitcoin ETFs like BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT) is emerging but remains limited and expensive relative to traditional securities finance.
The cheapest funding, Saylor warned, often comes with the most dangerous trade-off: low-rate Bitcoin-backed credit in exchange for transfer of collateral and rehypothecation. “I’ve had people offer me Bitcoin-backed credit at 1% or 0%,” he said, but added the caveat that lenders typically require the borrower to transfer the Bitcoin so it can be rehypothecated. Rehypothecation, Saylor argued, multiplies effective supply because collateral can be reused and “effectively ‘sold’ multiple times.” He illustrated the effect: $10 million posted as collateral can be rehypothecated several times, potentially creating $30–40 million of synthetic selling pressure.
Saylor’s prescription is structural: what the market lacks is a large, regulated, non-rehypothecating credit system for Bitcoin—financing that mirrors mainstream securities lending and allows holders to monetize without handing control of their coins to intermediaries. Without that, price discovery will continue to be shaped by a shadow-credit workaround that manufactures synthetic supply.
His conclusion was timing, not a repudiation of Bitcoin’s long-term case: if banks take “four years, 5 years, 6 years” to fully bank Bitcoin, then cycles will keep being limited by shadow financing. If conventional credit rails mature without aggressive rehypothecation, secured borrowing could replace forced selling and potentially raise the ceiling on future rallies.
At press time, Bitcoin traded at $72,236.
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