Veteran trader Peter Brandt and Bernstein analysts Gautam Chhugani and Mahika Sapra are projecting a Bitcoin (BTC) price peak between $300,000 and $500,000 by late 2029. While these forecasts track the historical four-year halving cycle, a growing coalition of market observers argues that the mathematical reality of diminishing returns may prevent such a parabolic “moonshot” from occurring as the asset matures.
As of July 11, 2026, the debate centers on whether Bitcoin can maintain the explosive multiples seen in its early years. In 2017, the price reached nearly $20,000, which represented a 75x increase from the 2013 high of $266. However, every subsequent cycle has seen these multiples shrink significantly.
Halving cycle patterns meet the law of large numbers for Peter Brandt projects
The 2021 peak of approximately $69,000 was only 3.5x the 2017 high, and the 2025 peak of $126,000 offered just a 1.8x multiple from 2021. To hit $300,000, Bitcoin would need to more than double its 2025 high, a massive capital requirement for an asset that is now a multi-trillion dollar market participant.
The bull case for 2029 relies on the mining reward halving, an event that occurs every four years and reduces new supply by 50%. The fifth halving is scheduled for April 2028.
Historically, Bitcoin price analysis shows a consistent pattern where the market bottoms out roughly 18 months before a halving and peaks 16 to 18 months after. If this timeframe holds, the next cycle peak would arrive in late 2029.
Peter Brandt has set a target range of $300,000 to $500,000 for September or October 2029, though he qualifies this by stating it should happen “should patterns continue.”
Brandt accurately called the 2025 bull market peak and the 2018 bear market bottom, but he suggests that Bitcoin needs to form an “investable low” in late 2026 before this next trajectory can truly begin.
The widening range of $200,000 in his target reflects the uncertainty of just how much institutional and governmental participation will enter the market over the next three years.
Analysts at Bernstein, Gautam Chhugani and Mahika Sapra, are even more aggressive, forecasting $500,000 by 2029 and $1,000,000 by 2033. Their optimism is fueled by the massive growth of spot Exchange-Traded Funds (ETFs). They project Bitcoin ETF assets under management (AUM) could reach $190 billion by 2025, a significant jump from today’s $60 billion.
This institutionalization is also reflected in how Italy’s largest bank exceeded $200M in Bitcoin exposure, signaling a shift in traditional finance’s appetite for the asset.
Diminishing returns and the reality of market maturity
Despite the optimism, the “math” of the four-year cycle suggests Bitcoin is growing steadier rather than faster. As the asset becomes more liquid and institutionalized, it naturally becomes less volatile and more “Wall Street-like.”
Sophisticated risk management tools, such as Bitcoin ETF futures, options, and arbitrage funds, are deepening the market but also dampening the wild price swings that characterized 2013 and 2017. This transition suggests the era of parabolic gains may be over.
Brian Estes, founder of Off The Chain Capital, offers the most bullish outlier, suggesting Bitcoin could reach $10 million by 2029 based on a logarithmic regression model. Estes compares the asset’s adoption curve to the internet, predicting 90% global adoption by 2029.
Meanwhile, Ric Edelman sees a path to $500,000 by 2030, calculating that even a “tiny slice” of broad global wealth moving into crypto would be sufficient to reach that level.
These models, however, assume a continued acceleration of demand that ignores the reality of Bitcoin exchange supply trends and the sheer volume of capital required to move the price at these valuations.
Even if massive fiscal and monetary stimulus programs are launched, history shows the impact on Bitcoin’s multiple is fading. Post-2020 stimulus helped lift BTC to 3.5x its previous high in 2021, but the 2025 high, which benefited from unprecedented ETF inflows, could only manage 1.8x. While Bitcoin is not “breaking,” it is clearly maturing.
For investors, the takeaway is clear: while new all-time highs are likely, the days of chasing a 75x moonshot have likely been replaced by a more measured, institutionalized climb.
