Bitcoin performance has hit a significant roadblock as major prediction markets and sentiment trackers suggest the six-figure milestone is slipping out of reach for 2026. Data from the Kalshi prediction market on May 31, 2026, shows that traders now see only a 32% chance of the Bitcoin price hitting $100,000 before the year ends, a sharp correction from earlier projections. With the market currently characterized by “Bearish” sentiment and persistent interest rate pressures, the aggressive road to a new all-time high has stalled.
The current lack of confidence marks a stark reversal from the start of the year. In January 2026, the probability of Bitcoin crossing the $100,000 threshold sat at 94%. By late May, that annual probability had tumbled to 47%. While some remain hopeful for a late-cycle recovery, the odds for Bitcoin reaching $100,000 before January 2027 are currently pinned at just 34%. This cooling occurs as the asset hovers near $73,476, far below the all-time high of $126,080 reached in late 2025.
The sluggish price action is creating a ripple effect across the broader digital asset sector. Investors are increasingly wary as secondary tokens struggle to find momentum. Recent Bitcoin price analysis highlights how repeated rejections at key resistance levels are exhausting buyers. This trend is mirrored elsewhere, as seen where Ondo Finance approaches critical support amid intensifying sell-side pressure, illustrating the fragile state of current market liquidity.
Macroeconomic factors and the liquidity squeeze
Central bank policies remain the primary headwind for digital assets. The Federal Reserve has maintained high interest rates to combat sticky inflation, which has shifted capital away from non-yielding assets toward safer options like bonds. High rates effectively raise the “bar” for Bitcoin, as institutional investors find reliable returns in traditional markets without the volatility associated with cryptocurrency.
Liquidity tightening has further restricted the “cheap money” that historically fueled massive rallies. Prediction platforms like Polymarket reflect this deep-seated skepticism; traders there assign a mere 11% probability to Bitcoin reaching $150,000 by December 2026. The most favored outcome on that platform is Bitcoin simply remaining above $90,000, which carries a 68% probability, suggesting a year of consolidation rather than explosive growth.
Bearish sentiment among institutional traders
Sentiment data suggests that top-tier traders are positioning for further downside or stagnation. A study of high-performing traders on Binance revealed that 51% are currently shorting Bitcoin. This bearish positioning aligns with a sentiment score of 12 on the Fear & Greed Index, a level indicating significant market anxiety. Historically, the index has spent over 30% of its history in “Fear” territory, often preceding long periods of range-bound trading.
As macro warning signs emerge alongside rising Treasury yields, the risk of further liquidations remains a concern. When yields rise, the cost of leverage increases, often forcing speculative traders out of their positions. For Bitcoin to regain its upward trajectory, it would likely require a significant shift in Federal Reserve policy or a sudden influx of global liquidity that hasn’t yet materialized.
What the prediction market timeline indicates
The timeline for a potential price surge has been pushed back significantly. On Kalshi, the odds for Bitcoin reaching $100,000 before July 2026 are a negligible 4%. This suggests following the “summer lull” pattern rather than a breakout. Even looking toward October 2026, the probability only increases to 17%, leaving much of the heavy lifting for the very end of the year or early 2027.
While technical infrastructure continues to improve, market prices remain decoupled from utility. Solutions like Bitcoin Hyper (HYPER) are raising millions to lower transaction costs, yet the market focus remains locked on macroeconomic gravity. Until central banks signal a pivot, the $100,000 target serves more as a distant psychological barrier than a realistic short-term goal for the 2026 calendar year.
