Standard Chartered sees bitcoin sliding to $50,000, ether to $1,400 before recovery
The bank cuts its 2026 crypto price targets, warning of further near-term capitulation as ETF outflows and macro headwinds weigh on digital assets.

What to know:
- Standard Chartered expects bitcoin to fall to around $50,000 and ether to $1,400 in the coming months.
- The bank lowered its end-2026 targets to $100,000 for BTC and $4,000 for ETH.
- Long-term forecasts through 2030 remain unchanged, with the bank still constructive on the asset class.
Investment bank Standard Chartered lowered its short-term and full-year price forecasts for major cryptocurrencies, citing continued downside risk as exchange-traded fund (ETF) outflows and a challenging macro backdrop pressure the market.
The bank now expects bitcoin
The world's largest cryptocurrency was trading around $67,900 at publication time. Ether, the second-largest, was trading around $1,980.
Geoff Kendrick, Standard Chartered's head of digital assets research, said the selloff in recent weeks could extend as ETF investors, many sitting on losses, are more likely to reduce exposure than “buy the dip.”
Once prices establish a bottom, Kendrick said, he expects a recovery through the rest of 2026. The analyst reduced his year-end target for bitcoin to $100,000 from $150,000, ether to $4,000 from $7,500, solana
The crypto market has weakened sharply in early 2026, with major assets like bitcoin sliding significantly from late-2025 highs and the total market cap down sharply over recent weeks. Bitcoin has dropped almost 23% since the start of the year.
The downturn has been marked by heightened volatility, large liquidations of leveraged positions and broad risk-off sentiment, which has seen crypto correlate more closely with weakening equity markets.
Macro pressures such as concerns about global growth and interest-rate outlooks have pushed investors toward traditional havens like gold, while stalled regulatory clarity, particularly in the U.S., and liquidity strains at some institutions have weighed on confidence. Combined, these forces have led to reduced trading revenues for crypto-exposed firms and bearish sentiment across many tokens.
Holdings of bitcoin ETFs have declined by nearly 100,000 BTC from their October 2025 peak, according to Kendrick. The average ETF purchase price is around $90,000, leaving many investors with unrealized losses of roughly 25%.
Macro conditions are also weighing on sentiment. Kendrick noted that while U.S. economic data show signs of softening, markets expect no interest-rate cuts before Kevin Warsh’s first Federal Open Market Committee meeting as Federal Reserve chair in mid-June, limiting near-term support for risk assets.
Despite the expected capitulation, the bank said the current drawdown is less severe than previous cycles. At its worst point in early February, bitcoin was down about 50% from its October 2025 all-time high, and roughly half of supply remained in profit, declines that are sharp but not as extreme as in prior downturns.
Crucially, this cycle has not seen the collapse of major crypto platforms, unlike 2022’s failures of Terra/Luna and FTX. Kendrick said that suggests the asset class is maturing and more resilient.
The analyst left his longer-term projections unchanged, maintaining end-2030 targets of $500,000 for bitcoin and $40,000 for ether, arguing that usage trends and structural drivers remain intact.
The analyst previously reduced his bullish bitcoin forecasts in December.
Read more: Standard Chartered Throws in the Towel on Bullish Bitcoin Forecast
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Bitcoin could fall to $10,000 as U.S. recession risk builds, Mike McGlone says

McGlone links bitcoin’s downturn to record U.S. market cap-to-GDP levels, low equity volatility and rising gold prices, warning of potential contagion into stocks.
What to know:
- Bloomberg Intelligence strategist Mike McGlone warns that collapsing crypto prices and a potential bitcoin slide toward $10,000 could signal mounting financial stress and foreshadow a U.S. recession.
- McGlone argues the post-2008 "buy the dip" era may be ending as crypto weakens, stock market valuations sit near century highs relative to GDP, and equity volatility remains unusually low.
- Market analyst Jason Fernandes counters that a drop to $10,000 bitcoin would likely require a severe systemic shock and recession, calling such an outcome a low-probability tail risk compared with a milder reset or consolidation.










