About
STRC.world is here to help you track and profit from the digital credit revolution.
In late 2025, I started following STRC out of curiosity and skepticism. It seemed too good to be true. But over the months that followed, I came to understand what Michael Saylor was actually building: not just a product, but the first credible digital credit instrument capable of pulling capital out of the traditional credit stack at global scale.
Once that clicked, I couldn’t unsee it. If anyone in the world can move money into an instrument with higher yield, deeper liquidity, and radically better transparency, then this is not a niche security. It is a direct challenge to the foundations of the global credit system. Insurance. Annuities. Private credit. Corporate treasuries. Government debt. Every major lender. Every major borrower. Anything built on captive, opaque, slow-moving capital starts to look exposed.
During the week of March 9, 2026, my perspective shifted from curiosity to alarm. STRC started scaling at an exponentially faster rate, and in a single week Strategy raised more than $1 billion through the product. That was the moment the risk became real to me. The question was no longer whether there would be demand. The question was whether the existing financial system was prepared for what happens if this scales.
It isn’t. And almost nobody is tracking it seriously.
Around the same time, hearing the True North Podcast articulate the same concerns made something else clear to me: I wasn’t alone. Other people were seeing the same thing. They understood that if this works, it will not be a product story. It will be a system story.
That is why we built STRC.world.
This site exists for the small number of people who already sense that something enormous is taking shape and want to watch it unfold with discipline instead of vibes. We track the major milestones, signals, and forecast dates along the path toward a potential disruption of $300 trillion in global credit. We are doing our best to estimate when the key shifts will happen so you can see them forming before they are obvious, understand what is driving them, and put yourself in position before the rest of the world catches up.
If this thesis is right, this will not just be another successful financial product. It will be a system event. Capital will move. Balance sheets will adjust. Old advantages will weaken. New advantages will compound. And the people who benefit most will not be the people who heard about it last. They will be the people who understood early what was coming and paid attention while everyone else was still dismissing it.
Fortunes will be made and lost in the digital credit revolution. Which side will you be on?