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Cover image for Bitcoin’s 50% Slide: Quantum Scare or Capital Rotation?

Bitcoin’s 50% Slide: Quantum Scare or Capital Rotation?

Bitcoin Magazine Bitcoin’s 50% Slide: Quantum Scare or Capital Rotation? Bitcoin’s 46% decline from its October peak near $126,100 to roughly $67,000 has triggered debate over what is driving the pullback. Some market participants have pointed to quantum computing as a looming threat to the network’s cryptographic security. Others argue the explanation lies elsewhere, in shifting capital flows, tightening liquidity and changing miner economics. On a recent episode of the Unchained podcast hosted by Laura Shin, Bitcoin developer Matt Corallo rejected the idea that quantum fears are behind the downturn. If investors were pricing in imminent quantum risk to Bitcoin’s cryptography, he said, Ether would likely be outperforming rather than falling in tandem. Bitcoin is down roughly 46% from its all-time high, while Ether has fallen roughly 58% since an early-October market break. Corallo argued that this parallel weakness undercuts the claim that quantum computing is uniquely weighing on Bitcoin. He added that some holders may be looking for a scapegoat to explain weak price action. The quantum debate has gained visibility as researchers explore post-quantum cryptography and as asset managers update disclosures. Last year, BlackRock amended the registration statement for its iShares Bitcoin ETF to flag quantum computing as a potential risk to the network’s integrity. Corallo countered that market pricing does not signal urgency. He framed the current environment as one in which Bitcoin is competing for capital against other sectors, especially artificial intelligence. Bitcoin mining and AI infrastructure AI infrastructure requires large data centers, specialized chips and significant energy capacity. That capital intensity, he suggested, has drawn investor attention and funding that might otherwise have flowed into digital assets. Mining data reflects these crosscurrents. Bitcoin mining difficulty recently climbed to 144.4 trillion, a 15% increase and the largest percentage jump since 2021, when China’s mining ban disrupted the network before operations stabilized. Difficulty adjusts every 2,016 blocks, about every two weeks, to keep block production near a 10-minute average regardless of hashrate changes. The latest increase follows a 12% decline in difficulty after a drop in total computational power. In October, when bitcoin traded near $126,500, hashrate peaked around 1.1 zettahash per second. As prices slid toward $60,000 in February, hashrate fell to 826 exahash per second. It has since recovered to about 1 zettahash per second as bitcoin rebounded to the high-$60,000 range. Even with that recovery, miner economics remain tight. Hashprice, a measure of daily revenue per unit of hashrate, sits near multi-year lows around $23.9 per petahash per second. Lower revenues have pressured margins, particularly for operators with higher energy costs. Large-scale miners with access to inexpensive power have continued to expand. The United Arab Emirates, for example, is estimated to hold roughly $344 million in unrealized profit from mining operations. At the same time, several publicly listed mining firms are reallocating energy and computing resources toward AI and high-performance computing data centers. Bitfarms recently rebranded to remove explicit bitcoin references as it increases its focus on AI infrastructure. Activist investor Starboard Value has urged Riot Platforms to expand further into AI data center operations. The shift underscores Corallo’s point that bitcoin now competes directly with other capital-intensive technologies. Bitcoin is consolidating in ‘extreme fear’ Onchain data suggests the market remains in a compression phase. Analytics firm Glassnode reports that BTC has broken below its “True Market Mean,” a model that tracks the aggregate cost basis of active supply and currently sits near $79,000. The firm identifies the Realized Price, around $54,900, as a lower structural boundary. Bitcoin has traded between roughly $60,000 and $70,000 in recent sessions, within that corridor. Sentiment remains fragile. The Crypto Fear and Greed Index has registered “extreme fear” for weeks. Yet some analysts see valuation support. Bitwise’s head of European research, André Dragosch, said bitcoin appears undervalued relative to global money supply growth, gold and exchange-traded product flows. He expects consolidation rather than a rapid recovery, noting that sharp capitulations rarely produce immediate V-shaped rebounds outside crisis events. Macro data may shape the next move. Traders are watching U.S. core PCE inflation figures for signals on Federal Reserve policy. Higher inflation could support scarce assets in theory, but a hawkish response could strengthen the dollar and pressure risk markets. At the time of writing, Bitcoin is trading near $67,000. This post Bitcoin’s 50% Slide: Quantum Scare or Capital Rotation? first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.

Cover image for Strategy ($MSTR) Shares Sink Over 20% in 5 Days as Bitcoin Crashes to $72,000

Strategy ($MSTR) Shares Sink Over 20% in 5 Days as Bitcoin Crashes to $72,000

Bitcoin Magazine Strategy ($MSTR) Shares Sink Over 20% in 5 Days as Bitcoin Crashes to $72,000 Shares of Strategy ($MSTR) plunged again today as Bitcoin’s sell‑off deepened, reinforcing the tight correlation between the world’s largest corporate Bitcoin holder and the digital asset’s price action. Bitcoin cratered toward $72,000, extending losses to levels not seen since late 2024, while MSTR shares tumbled roughly 9% on the session, dipping to intraday lows near $121.19. At current levels the stock is down roughly 15% year‑to‑date and a staggering 72% from its November 2024 peak. The drop in Bitcoin — now hovering near $72,000, far below the multi‑year highs seen in 2025 — has rippled across the broader crypto complex. With sentiment souring and tactical traders eyeing technical support levels near the mid‑$60,000 range, risk assets have taken on a pronounced downbeat tone. Commentary from market strategists has ranged from cautionary to outright bearish, with calls for deeper retracements if demand fails to stabilize. Analyst slashes $MSTR price target by 60% In a notable update this week, Canaccord Genuity analyst Joseph Vafi, long viewed as one of MSTR’s most vocal supporters, dramatically slashed his price target from $474 to $185 — a 61% reduction — while maintaining a Buy rating on the stock. According to Vafi’s revised outlook, the new target still implies “significant upside” from current levels if volatility subsides and Bitcoin finds a tradable bottom. Vafi’s retained bullish stance — despite the sharp target cut — highlights a nuanced view among some Wall Street strategists: even amid brutal downside, the stock’s deep discount to theoretical Bitcoin net‑asset value could eventually reprice upward. Strategy continues bitcoin purchasing Earlier this week, Strategy said it purchased 855 bitcoin for about $75.3 million, paying an average price of $87,974 per BTC, according to a Monday filing. The acquisition came just days before bitcoin fell below $75,000 over the weekend on some rapid selling, briefly pushing Strategy’s treasury close to $1 billion in unrealized losses. Now, the price of bitcoin is below those levels at $72,000. The company now holds 713,502 BTC, acquired for roughly $54.26 billion at an average cost of $76,052 per coin. Last week’s purchase was fully funded through the sale of common stock, following Strategy’s ongoing capital-raising approach to finance bitcoin buys. The purchase of 855 bitcoin was significantly smaller compared to prior company purchases. All eyes remain on MSTR’s upcoming fourth‑quarter 2025 earnings release, scheduled for later this week, a report that could provide more color on its capital‑raising cadence, BTC purchase strategy, and the evolving balance between leverage and asset coverage. At the time of writing, bitcoin’s price dropped to lows near $72,000 today, its lowest level in over a year. The bitcoin price has now retraced more than 40% from its all‑time highs reached in late 2025. This post Strategy ($MSTR) Shares Sink Over 20% in 5 Days as Bitcoin Crashes to $72,000 first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.

Cover image for Bitcoin’s Next Stop Might Be $50,000, Not the Moon, Says Standard Chartered Analyst

Bitcoin’s Next Stop Might Be $50,000, Not the Moon, Says Standard Chartered Analyst

Bitcoin Magazine Bitcoin’s Next Stop Might Be $50,000, Not the Moon, Says Standard Chartered Analyst itcoin is at risk of deeper losses as risk appetite fades and macro pressure builds, according to Standard Chartered’s head of digital assets research Geoff Kendrick. In a note reported on by Bloomberg, Kendrick said weaker U.S. economic momentum and reduced expectations for Federal Reserve rate cuts have weighed on crypto markets. He added that falling digital-asset ETF holdings have removed a key source of demand. Kendrick warned bitcoin could drop to $50,000 and Ethereum could fall toward $1,400 before stabilizing later in the year. BTC trades near $67,869 after reaching a 16-month low of $60,008 last week. Standard Chartered cut its year-end bitcoin forecast by a third, lowering its 2026 target to $100,000 from $150,000. The bank cited deteriorating macro conditions and the risk of further investor capitulation. Bitcoin has already suffered a major correction, falling as much as 50% from its October 2025 record high at its worst close on Feb. 5. Standard Chartered estimates only half of BTC supply remains in profit, a sharp decline though less severe than in prior bear cycles. The bank pointed to an unsupportive interest-rate backdrop as a key headwind. Markets have pushed back expectations for Fed easing, with investors now looking for the first cut later in the year. Kendrick said uncertainty around future Fed leadership has added to caution. ETF flows also remain a concern. Standard Chartered estimated bitcoin ETF holdings have dropped by almost 100,000 BTC from their October 2025 peak. With an average purchase price near $90,000, many ETF investors now hold unrealized losses, raising the chance of additional selling pressure. Despite the near-term downgrade, the bank maintained a constructive longer-term outlook. Kendrick noted that on-chain usage data continues to improve and the current downturn has not triggered major platform failures, unlike the 2022 cycle that saw collapses such as Terra/Luna and FTX. Standard Chartered continues downgrading Bitcoin Back in December of last year, Standard Chartered halved its forecasts, seeing Bitcoin at $100,000 by end-2025 and $150,000 by end-2026, while keeping a $500,000 target pushed out to 2030. Bitcoin did not hit $100,000 by the end of 2025. The bank cited fading corporate treasury demand and slowing ETF flows at the time. Geoffrey Kendrick said corporate accumulation has “run its course,” leaving ETF inflows as the main driver. Bitcoin is currently trading near $67,000, per Bitcoin Magazine Pro data. This post Bitcoin’s Next Stop Might Be $50,000, Not the Moon, Says Standard Chartered Analyst first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.

Cover image for Bitcoin Could Hit $2.9 Million by 2050, VanEck Says

Bitcoin Could Hit $2.9 Million by 2050, VanEck Says

Bitcoin Magazine Bitcoin Could Hit $2.9 Million by 2050, VanEck Says VanEck released a new report on Bitcoin’s long-term capital market assumptions today, projecting strong growth over the next several decades and outlining how institutional investors might use the asset in diversified portfolios. The report, authored by VanEck’s Head of Digital Assets Research Matthew Sigel and Senior Analyst Patrick Bush, models BTC reaching $2.9 million per coin by 2050 under a base-case scenario. This represents a 15% compound annual growth rate (CAGR) from today’s prices. The model assumes BTC captures 5–10% of global trade and becomes a reserve asset making up 2.5% of central bank balance sheets. Bitcoin at $53.4 million per coin in 2050 VanEck also provided a range of outcomes. In a conservative “bear” scenario, Bitcoin grows at just 2% per year, reaching around $130,000 per coin. In a bullish “hyper-bitcoinization” scenario, where BTC captures 20% of global trade and 10% of domestic GDP, the asset could theoretically reach $53.4 million per coin, a 29% CAGR. The report emphasizes Bitcoin’s potential as a strategic, low-correlation asset for institutional portfolios. VanEck recommends a 1–3% allocation for most diversified portfolios. For higher risk-tolerant investors, allocations up to 20% historically optimize returns, according to their analysis. $161 billion investment firm VanEck is predicting a $2.9 million #Bitcoin price by 2050 and you're bearish? pic.twitter.com/c2EtXG7Yo0 — Bitcoin Magazine (@BitcoinMagazine) January 8, 2026 VanEck argues that BTC’s role is becoming more than speculative. It could function as a reserve asset and hedge against monetary debasement, particularly as developed markets face high sovereign debt. “The risk of zero exposure to the most established non-sovereign reserve asset may now exceed the volatility risk of the position itself,” the report notes. The firm’s research also addresses volatility and market structure. Annualized BTC volatility is modeled at 40–70%, comparable to frontier equities or early-stage tech, though realized volatility recently hit multi-year lows near 27%. VanEck attributes much of Bitcoin’s short-term price swings to futures leverage and derivatives, rather than fundamental adoption issues. They also highlight BTC’s historically low correlation to stocks, bonds, and gold, with a long-term negative correlation to the U.S. dollar. For tactical investors, VanEck tracks blockchain metrics such as the Relative Unrealized Profit (RUP). As of December 31, 2025, Bitcoin’s RUP was 0.43 — mid-cycle — suggesting room for further gains before a market peak. Futures funding rates remain moderate at 4.9%, below levels that typically signal market tops. On portfolio impact, VanEck’s simulations show that even small BTC allocations can improve efficiency. In a traditional 60/40 equity-bond portfolio, replacing 1–3% with Bitcoin increased the Sharpe Ratio, capturing the asset’s “convex return” without adding proportional risk. A 3% allocation historically yielded the highest return per unit of risk in their analysis. At the time of writing, Bitcoin is near $91,000. This post Bitcoin Could Hit $2.9 Million by 2050, VanEck Says first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.

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