- Michael Saylor identified four Bitcoin groups: Maximalists, Capitalists, Technologists, and Fundamentalists.
- Bitcoin Capitalists support institutional adoption through banks, corporate treasuries, lending, and capital markets integration.
- Saylor argues all four perspectives strengthen Bitcoin by balancing growth, innovation, decentralization, and core principles.
Michael Saylor, chairman of Strategy, has published a new framework describing four distinct schools of thought shaping Bitcoin’s future. In a paper released this week, Saylor said Bitcoin’s growing global role has created different perspectives on adoption, technology, governance, and monetary principles, with each group approaching the network from a different direction.
Maximalists And Capitalists Define Adoption
According to Michael Saylor, Bitcoin Maximalists view the asset as the world’s dominant digital monetary network. He said this group focuses on fixed supply, decentralization, property rights, and protection against inflation and currency debasement.
However, Saylor separated that view from what he called Bitcoin Capitalists. He described them as supporters of broader integration with banks, companies, governments, and capital markets.
According to the paper, Capitalists see Bitcoin as digital capital that can support custody services, corporate treasuries, lending products, and Bitcoin-backed securities. Saylor added that this approach accepts institutional participation while recognizing the risks linked to leverage and financial complexity.
Technologists And Fundamentalists Take Different Paths
Saylor also identified Bitcoin Technologists as a separate group. He said they believe the protocol should continue evolving to improve privacy, security, scalability, and compatibility with future technologies.
At the same time, he noted that protocol changes should meet a high standard because mistakes could affect decentralization or monetary integrity.
In contrast, Saylor described Bitcoin Fundamentalists as defenders of self-custody, personal nodes, censorship resistance, and immutability. According to the paper, they seek to protect Bitcoin from institutional capture, excessive financialization, and unnecessary base-layer changes.
Saylor Says Each Group Serves A Different Purpose
According to Saylor, the four ideologies answer different questions about Bitcoin’s future. He wrote that Maximalists focus on what Bitcoin has already proven, while Capitalists concentrate on integration with the global economy.
Meanwhile, Technologists look at future improvements, and Fundamentalists focus on preserving Bitcoin’s original principles.
Saylor said the network benefits from all four perspectives because each protects a different part of Bitcoin’s development. He added that Bitcoin can serve individuals, companies, banks, families, and governments without belonging exclusively to any single group.
