For months, proponents of Bitcoin have held onto the expectation that the cryptocurrency market will reach its peak before the conclusion of 2025. However, leading voices in the field of crypto analysis are cautioning that this optimistic outlook may be built on unstable foundations.
Analyst PlanC, a prominent figure on the social media platform X, emphasizes that traders may be overly reliant on a limited historical context. With merely three halving cycles to reference, he argues that the belief Bitcoin will necessarily replicate its previous performance is fundamentally flawed—akin to the gamble of a coin toss consistently landing the same way. PlanC highlights that contemporary factors, such as corporate balance sheets increasingly containing Bitcoin and substantial investments flowing into U.S. spot exchange-traded funds (ETFs), could now exert a more significant influence on market cycles than the conventional halving narrative.
He further asserts, “Anyone who thinks Bitcoin has to peak in Q4 of this year does not understand statistics or probability.” According to PlanC, the halving’s relevance has diminished, and there is little to no fundamental rationale—besides a psychological, self-fulfilling prophecy—for the market to peak in the fourth quarter of this year.
Investors often point to Bitcoin’s historically robust performance in the final quarter, with data from CoinGlass indicating an average gain exceeding 85% since 2013. Nonetheless, PlanC cautions that this correlation does not imply causation, arguing that it is psychological factors that fuel the belief in a fourth-quarter rally rather than concrete fundamentals.
The debate over Bitcoin’s future trajectory is not uniform among experts. Steven McClurg from Canary Capital remains optimistic, proposing that Bitcoin could surge to the $140,000 to $150,000 range before experiencing a downturn in 2026. In contrast, Bitwise Chief Investment Officer Matt Hougan contends that the bullish trend has the potential to extend into 2026 and beyond. Meanwhile, well-known figures such as Arthur Hayes and Joe Burnett have suggested ambitious year-end targets approaching $250,000.
What remains evident is that the landscape for Bitcoin may not follow the well-trodden paths of past cycles as seamlessly as many hope. With new institutional dynamics at play, the market could chart a different and more unpredictable course, rendering year-end predictions increasingly uncertain.