
Founded in 1993, The Motley Fool is a financial services company dedicated to making the world smarter, happier, and richer. The Motley Fool reaches millions of people every month through our premium investing solutions, free guidance and market analysis on Fool.com, top-rated podcasts, and non-profit The Motley Fool Foundation.
Founded in 1993, The Motley Fool is a financial services company dedicated to making the world smarter, happier, and richer. The Motley Fool reaches millions of people every month through our premium investing solutions, free guidance and market analysis on Fool.com, personal finance education, top-rated podcasts, and non-profit The Motley Fool Foundation.
Founded in 1993, The Motley Fool is a financial services company dedicated to making the world smarter, happier, and richer. The Motley Fool reaches millions of people every month through our premium investing solutions, free guidance and market analysis on Fool.com, top-rated podcasts, and non-profit The Motley Fool Foundation.
Founded in 1993, The Motley Fool is a financial services company dedicated to making the world smarter, happier, and richer. The Motley Fool reaches millions of people every month through our premium investing solutions, free guidance and market analysis on Fool.com, personal finance education, top-rated podcasts, and non-profit The Motley Fool Foundation.
You’re reading a free article with opinions that may differ from The Motley Fool’s Premium Investing Services. Become a Motley Fool member today to get instant access to our top analyst recommendations, in-depth research, investing resources, and more. Learn More
Key Points
There are a couple of powerful drivers that could push Bitcoin's run even further.
The world’s largest cryptocurrency, Bitcoin (BTC 0.36%) has been grinding higher again, with its price briefly surpassing its all-time high and reaching more than $126,000 on Oct. 6, continuing a run of 30% this year so far. It’s once again flirting with fresh record prices and reigniting one question in particular on many investors’ minds.
Can it clear $130,000 before 2026?
Image source: Getty Images.
After such a good year, it’s natural for investors to wonder if there’s much gas left in the tank with this asset. And there is — potentially quite a lot, in fact.
We’re now more than a year and a half out from the most recent halving in April 2024, when Bitcoin’s new daily issuance from mining fell to roughly 450 new coins per day, down from about 900 before that. As a reminder, the coin’s maximum supply is still 21 million, and the overwhelming majority of that sum is already in circulation. So as long as there are people trying to buy Bitcoin, they will be competing with each other in the form of bidding for higher prices to secure some of the supply, and they will never see more coming onto the market each day than they do right now.
On the demand side, the spot exchange-traded fund (ETF) market has become a meaningful new buyer that’s also driving prices higher. In the week ended Oct. 4, global crypto ETFs took in a record $5.9 billion, led by U.S. ETF products, as Bitcoin reached new highs. There have also been sustained positive net inflows over time, which is a clear sign that adoption among financial institutions is broadening.
If you put those pieces together, a push to $130,000 is a relatively small step from the coin’s recent record. It would be only a few percentage points above the latest highs, well within the band of normal month-to-month variation during strong uptrends. So it’s probably inevitable.
Of course, if the macroeconomic picture degrades suddenly, all bets are off, but that’s always the case. The key is that today’s setup still skews outcomes upward so long as buyers keep showing up. And for one big reason in particular that we’re about to get into, the probability of buyers continuing to demand Bitcoin is very, very high.
The most interesting driver of Bitcoin right now is macro.
As you may have heard, the dollar debasement trade is the idea that investors tilt toward scarce, non-fiat currency assets when they fear a decline in a currency’s purchasing power or worry about long-run fiscal sustainability. Both of those fears are alive and well with regard to the U.S. dollar at the moment.
There is ample data to justify the concern. The purchasing power of the U.S. consumer dollar has trended lower for decades, reflecting cumulative inflation; the recent surge in inflation since 2022 has aggravated the trend. Meanwhile, official projections show persistent and large deficits and rising federal debt over the coming decade, which can amplify worries about future inflation or currency weakness.
In that environment, assets with credibly scarce supply tend to look attractive. Gold’s bid in 2025 is one example, as it’s performing better than it has in decades. Bitcoin’s fixed cap and halving schedule give it similar scarcity characteristics, but with global portability.
If the debasement narrative persists and ETF channels continue to funnel capital into Bitcoin, new highs are extremely likely and reaching $130,000 before 2026 is very plausible, and perhaps far too conservative a price target. So what are investors going to do about it?
Consider dollar-cost averaging into Bitcoin to avoid anchoring to any single price print, and give the scarcity investment thesis a few years to play out rather than weeks. If the debasement trends endure and ETF demand keeps absorbing coins, the market will blow through $130,000 quite soon.
Alex Carchidi is a contributing Motley Fool healthcare and cryptocurrency analyst covering biotech, pharma, cannabis, and digital asset companies. Previously, Alex was a bench scientist and science writer at several biopharma companies and began his career as a researcher at the Ragon Institute of MGH, MIT, and Harvard. He holds a bachelor’s degree in biology from Boston University and a master’s degree in business administration with a concentration in finance from the University of Massachusetts Amherst.
Alex Carchidi has positions in Bitcoin. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Bitcoin. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.
Stocks Mentioned
*Average returns of all recommendations since inception. Cost basis and return based on previous market day close.
Related Articles
Invest better with The Motley Fool. Get stock recommendations, portfolio guidance, and more from The Motley Fool’s premium services.
Making the world smarter, happier, and richer.
© 1995 – 2025 The Motley Fool. All rights reserved.
Market data powered by Xignite and Polygon.io.
About The Motley Fool
Our Services
Around the Globe
Free Tools
Affiliates & Friends