Saylor’s Bold Call: US Banks Will Start Buying & Custodying Bitcoin by Mid-2026
Michael Saylor just dropped a timeline that could reshape the financial landscape. The MicroStrategy founder predicts US banks will begin direct Bitcoin purchases and custody services within the first half of 2026—barely a year from now.
The Regulatory Tipping Point
Forget waiting on the sidelines. Saylor sees a perfect storm brewing: clearer regulatory frameworks, institutional-grade custody solutions, and relentless demand from clients who've watched traditional savings accounts offer returns that barely beat inflation—if they're lucky. Banks aren't just facing competition from crypto natives anymore; they're staring at a potential exodus of capital.
From Vaults to Wallets
The move would mark a seismic shift. Banks would transform from skeptical observers to active participants, holding Bitcoin directly on their balance sheets and offering custody as a core service. It bypasses the ETF middleman, giving clients direct exposure while letting banks capture new fee revenue—because heaven forbid they miss a chance to monetize a new asset class.
The final barrier isn't technology or desire; it's the green light from regulators. Once that comes, the floodgates open. Get ready for the ultimate irony: the very institutions that once dismissed Bitcoin becoming its most powerful onboard ramp. Just in time to save their own relevance.
The evolution of institutional adoption
If implemented, the banks WOULD soon consider BTC a standard like traditional capital, offering custody directly and pledging the asset to derive liquidity. The structures that facilitate this change have been in the making with a series of incremental steps by global and local financial bodies.
It has been evident since last year when Wells Fargo asserted its presence in the market with their investment in Bitcoin ETFs. In July 2025, Bank of America had identified Bitcoin as the “best-performing currency” of the year, thus confirming its place in the market.
Efforts by U.S. and international banks
Morgan Stanley expanded access by opening cryptocurrency investing to its entire client base in October. Internationally, Japan has moved toward allowing banks to trade Bitcoin, and the Swiss bank LUKB has already begun accepting Bitcoin and Ethereum as collateral for loans.
The entry of major U.S. banks into custody and credit markets aligns with broader institutional forecasts. Citi has also indicated plans to launch an institutional cryptocurrency custody platform in 2026, which would provide the necessary technical framework for the rumors mentioned by Saylor.
Analysts at Deutsche Bank have projected that central banks could begin holding Bitcoin like Gold by the year 2030. If U.S. banks start to grant credit against native Bitcoin assets, as rumor has it, that would mean a giant lending market could be built on top, further reducing the supply of the asset as more coins would be kept in bank-grade custody rather than being traded on exchanges.
According to the timeline presented by Michael Saylor, the first half of 2026 promises to be a critical period for the legitimation of Bitcoin within the U.S. banking system. This movement from passive ETF investment to active custody and credit issuance mirrors trends already appearing in Switzerland and Japan.
Community response
Through this announcement, the public is interpreting that this could mean BTC potentially reaching $200,000 in 2026.
That means Bitcoin is hitting 200k in 2026
— luien🎭 (@luien_) December 26, 2025Others predict that Bitcoin will become a backbone in the financial space. “Banks don’t issue credit against assets they consider speculative. If this happens, Bitcoin just became infrastructure,” a user commented. “Sounds like Bitcoin is moving closer to being a standard financial asset,” another user added.
Current market analysis
At the time of writing, Bitcoin is trading at $88,416.54, with a slight 24-hour gain of 0.99%. The market cap remains strong at $1.76 trillion, while a 74.72% surge in 24-hour trading volume to $34.85 billion indicates high market activity. The circulating supply stands at 19.96M BTC, while the overall supply remains 21M BTC.
The future of Bitcoin-backed credit
As institutions like Citi and Bank of America formalize their digital asset strategies, the integration of Bitcoin into traditional banking balance sheets appears to be moving toward a standardized reality.
If Saylor is proven correct, the ability for banks to issue credit against Bitcoin could fundamentally change the liquidity profile of the asset. By using Bitcoin as collateral for loans, holders would be able to access fiat currency without selling their positions, potentially reducing market sell-pressure.
The entry of major banks into the custody space would also likely increase the security infrastructure around digital assets and lead to higher levels of adoption among conservative institutional investors.
Also Read: IMF Backs El Salvador’s Economic Progress as BTC Tensions Grow

