Benjamin Cowen, a macroeconomic analyst and founder of the crypto research platform Into the Cryptoverse, has released a new memo predicting a Bitcoin (BTC) bottom near $44,000 in the fourth quarter of 2026.
Cowen, also a member of BeInCrypto’s Market Intelligence experts council, has now formally shifted his analytical framework into “bottom-watch mode,” suggesting the current market reset is more a function of time than a sudden price collapse.
Understanding the Shift from Price to Time in Bitcoin Cycles
His projection lands squarely within the $44,000 to $47,000 zone that BeInCrypto’s internal models had identified just a week prior. This convergence of independent analyses underscores a growing consensus among some market observers about Bitcoin’s potential floor later this year.
Cowen’s core thesis compares the Bitcoin peak observed in October 2025 with the earlier June 2019 top. Both cycles, he notes, concluded on a note of market apathy rather than widespread euphoria, and critically, both occurred weeks before quantitative tightening measures formally ended.
The current Bitcoin drawdown has now extended for 282 days. For comparison, the 2019 analog cycle bottomed out at day 261, albeit catalyzed by the March 2020 pandemic crash. Cowen views that specific capitulation event as an external shock, not an inherent cycle mechanism.
Because the 2019 analog expired without a similar black swan event in the current cycle, Cowen argues the market reset will complete over an extended period. This implies a gradual grind downwards or sideways, rather than a sharp, sudden flush.
The October 2025 record high for Bitcoin stood above $126,000. Today, the cryptocurrency trades at 0.520 of that peak, representing a 48% decline. This substantial drop has coincided with a noticeable absence of retail enthusiasm, evidenced by new views on major crypto YouTube channels hovering around 389,000.
This figure is an order of magnitude lower than the four million views seen during the 2021 peak, signaling what Cowen terms an “apathy signature.” This lack of speculative interest further differentiates the current cycle from the more euphoric tops of 2017 and 2021.
Midterm Year Historical Patterns and Macroeconomic Pressures
The year 2026 falls into a significant category for Bitcoin: a midterm election year. Historically, these years have proven to be the weakest in Bitcoin’s established four-year cycle. Previous midterm years — 2014, 2018, and 2022 — consistently saw price decay through their second halves, failing to stage year-end rallies.
While July 2026 has been constructive, mirroring typical tendencies for this month in midterm years, August and September have historically turned negative. These months recorded losses between 15% and 18% in all three prior midterm cycles. Cowen’s year-to-date measure for Bitcoin has rebounded to 0.731, placing it above the midterm average for now.
However, if the historical decay path repeats, this reading could be dragged down to approximately 0.49 by year-end. Such a decline would imply a price point near $43,800. Cowen emphasizes this figure serves as an illustrative projection based on historical observations, not a definitive target. Still, the consistent direction across previous midterms lends weight to the analysis.
Two of the past cycles bottomed within the midterm year itself, specifically in December 2018 and November 2022. The 2014 cycle, however, extended into January 2015, keeping the possibility of an early 2027 bottom on the table. Adding to these historical patterns are prevailing macroeconomic conditions.
The “Warsh Fed” has reportedly removed its easing bias, and the energy-led disinflation that provided some relief has begun to fade. This combination is expected to maintain elevated real interest rates, extending into the same fourth-quarter window that Cowen highlights for a potential Bitcoin bottom.
On-Chain Indicators Point to an Incomplete Reset for Bitcoin
Cowen’s skepticism regarding an immediate market bottom is heavily influenced by on-chain data. The MVRV Z-Score, a metric often used to identify market tops and bottoms, currently reads 0.395. Historically, Bitcoin cycle bottoms only formed after this metric reset below zero, a condition not yet met.
A true reset, according to this indicator, requires Bitcoin’s price to trade beneath the realized price, which represents the market’s aggregate cost basis. This realized price currently sits near $53,000. The early-summer low, which dipped to approximately $57,000, approached this level but ultimately failed to break below it.
Cowen’s $43,800 estimate, derived from midterm year patterns, therefore falls within the corridor between the realized price and the balanced price, which is around $37,700. This alignment suggests a plausible zone for a bottom based on fundamental on-chain valuation metrics.
Cowen’s broader risk scorecard further supports this assessment; on-chain risk stands at 0.188 and Bitcoin risk at 0.311, both significantly lower than their levels a year ago at the market peak.
Despite these low-risk readings, the valuation reset remains less advanced than during the distressed market phase of July 2022. BeInCrypto’s own models independently arrived at a similar range. Their analysis of a “final 91-day window” projected a Bitcoin bottom between $44,000 and $47,000 by early October. This was derived from a regression on past drawdowns and a logarithmic Fibonacci retracement.
The logarithmic Fibonacci midpoint, precisely $44,428, is within about $700 of Cowen’s estimate. The convergence of two distinct analytical frameworks on both the price floor and the timing window adds considerable weight to the $44,000 price target.
The Path to Confirmation and What Lies Ahead for Crypto Investors
Institutional forecasts also reflect a similar range, contributing to the ongoing debate surrounding Bitcoin’s bottom. Standard Chartered, for instance, has projected a $59,000 floor, while Galaxy Digital offered a $40,000 scenario. Both institutions, however, generally dismiss the likelihood of a significantly deeper crash in the current cycle, aligning with Cowen’s more measured outlook.
A key trigger for Cowen
