Bitcoin analysts predict $300,000–$500,000 price in 2029. The math says no

Updated Jul 11, 2026, 3:03 a.m. Published Jul 11, 2026, 2:30 a.m.
3 min read

Summary
- Bitcoin’s historic four-year halving cycles are still producing new highs, but each bull market peak has delivered smaller multiples than the last.
- Forecasts calling for bitcoin to reach $300,000 to $500,000 by the next cycle peak in 2029 may be overly optimistic given the shrinking peak-to-peak returns and the asset’s growing size.
- As institutional participation, ETFs, and sophisticated derivatives deepen the market, bitcoin is becoming larger, more liquid and less volatile, suggesting the era of parabolic “moonshot” rallies may be over.
Crypto analysts are already looking at how high bitcoin BTC$64,143.74 could rally in the next cycle, expected to begin later this year, with ambitious targets ranging from $300,000 to $500,000.
But one important data point runs counter to those forecasts, suggesting that gains may be more measured than ever.
Unlike gold or stocks, bitcoin tends to move in clear four-year cycles centered on the mining reward halving, an event that halves the amount of new bitcoin produced per block every 4 years. Think of it as a programmed 50% reduction in the growth rate of the money supply.
The first halving happened in 2012, and the fifth one is scheduled for April 2028. In the past, prices have tended to bottom out and begin a new bull run roughly 18 months before the halving. That same bull run then peaks about 16-18 months after the halving, paving the way for a year-long bear market. That's the four-year cycle, and the peak of the next one is expected in 2029.
On the back of this, analysts and market experts have been calling for a massive bull run in the next few years.
Veteran trader Peter Brandt anticipates a peak between $300,000 and $500,000. Bernstein analysts Gautam Chhugani and Mahika Sapra expect prices to hit $500,000 by 2029, citing booming demand for spot exchange-traded funds (ETFs).
Reality check
However, while the four-year cycles have consistently produced new all-time highs, each successive one has seen markedly lower multiples, compressed gains, and slower overall expansion.
As bitcoin grows, matures, and becomes more valuable, it takes significantly more capital to push it meaningfully higher. The track record of cycle highs proves it:
- 2013: $266
- 2017: nearly ~$20,000 (75x from previous high)
- 2021: ~$69,000 (3.5x from 2017)
- 2025: $126,000 (just 1.8x from 2021)
What this means is that bull runs are getting steadier, with more measured gains rather than moonshots. If this trend continues, the next peak may fall well short of the anticipated $300,000 to $500,000 levels. (A rally to $300,000 or more requires over 2 times the jump from the 2025 high)
This is not necessarily bad news, however.
As noted earlier, the bigger the asset becomes, the more capital is required to move it higher. And with the institutionalization of the market and an ever-increasing array of advanced risk management products, such as bitcoin ETFs, futures, options, volatility products, arbitrage funds, and structured products with embedded options, BTC is naturally becoming less volatile and more Wall Street-like.
Bulls might argue that a potential full-blown Fed stimulus and outright purchases of BTC as a reserve asset by the U.S. Treasury may do the trick.
However, even massive fiscal and monetary stimulus after the 2020 COVID crash – not just in the U.S. but worldwide – could only lift BTC to nearly $70,000 in that cycle, 3.5x from 2017, marking a slowdown from the previous cycle. The 2025 high, which came with ETF flows and the most institutionalization ever, could only muster 1.8 times the level.
All this suggests that bitcoin is maturing and growing, not breaking. The days of peak-to-peak moonshots may be gone for good. The asset is now large, liquid, and institutionalized, and investors chasing the next parabolic supercycle might want to recalibrate.
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Digital assets posted a third consecutive quarter of losses in Q2 2026, the longest losing streak since the 2022 bear market, as institutional capital rotated into AI equities and Bitcoin ETFs recorded their largest quarterly outflow since launch. Our report examines what drove the divergence, where structural adoption continued regardless, and what Q3 signals to watch.
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Digital assets posted a third consecutive quarter of losses in Q2 2026, the longest losing streak since the 2022 bear market, as institutional capital rotated into AI equities and Bitcoin ETFs recorded their largest quarterly outflow since launch. Our report examines what drove the divergence, where structural adoption continued regardless, and what Q3 signals to watch.
Why it matters:
Digital assets posted a third consecutive quarter of losses in Q2 2026, the longest losing streak since the 2022 bear market, as institutional capital rotated into AI equities and Bitcoin ETFs recorded their largest quarterly outflow since launch. Our report examines what drove the divergence, where structural adoption continued regardless, and what Q3 signals to watch.
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