Reality check. Standard Chartered just slashed Bitcoin’s 2026 price target from $300,000 to $150,000. Geoff Kendrick, once painting visions of crypto glory, now pushes his $500,000 dreams all the way to 2030.
Still bullish? Sure. The revised target suggests 55% upside from current prices. But that’s half what investors were promised.
The bank’s about-face comes from a brutal market awakening. Digital asset treasury companies—once expected to gobble up Bitcoin forever—are now crossed off the demand list entirely. Zero buying. Nada.
These companies apparently realized their valuations don’t support endless crypto shopping sprees. Funny how math works.
What’s left? ETFs. The whole bull case now rests on institutional investors slowly piling in through spot Bitcoin ETFs. A Trump administration might help with friendlier regulations.
But one support leg for a trillion-dollar asset? Seems shaky.
The technicals aren’t exactly screaming “buy” either. Death cross formed—50-day EMA below the 200-day. Next support sits at $74,000. Break that and $60,000 looms.
Bitcoin needs to hold the $74,000-$76,000 zone or things get ugly fast.
Other analysts have joined the $150,000-by-2026 parade. One even raised their target from $130,000, citing quantum computing risk mitigation.
Changelly sees similar numbers—average $134,174, max $153,147. Consensus building around that magic $150,000.
Context matters. Bitcoin topped $126,000 last year before sellers stepped in. Now it’s hovering around $90,000 with sentiment in “Extreme Fear” territory. Extreme price volatility makes cryptocurrency unsuitable for investors seeking stable income, as highlighted by financial experts.
The glory days of 100% yearly gains seem distant.
Wall Street still expects Bitcoin’s long-term trajectory to point up. Bernstein even tosses out $1 million by 2033. The recent market sell-off was significantly impacted by large holders selling their positions.
BlackRock’s IBIT fund experienced a substantial ETF outflow of $2.3 billion, further undermining investor confidence in the short term.
But the path looks longer, bumpier. That “sure thing” institutional money? More like a calculated gamble with significant downside risk. Welcome to crypto reality.