Bitcoin (BTC) traded at $77,650 per coin on Monday, April 27, 2026, slipping 1% after testing
$79,500 during the Asian session, the highest level in roughly two and a half
months.
The
pullback came two days after veteran trader Peter Brandt published a multi-year
Bitcoin price prediction targeting a $300,000 to $500,000 cycle peak by
September-October 2029, conditional on the four-year halving rhythm that has
defined BTC since 2011 continuing to hold.
Brandt also
flagged that his framework calls for one more investable low in
September-October 2026, which may or may not penetrate the February 2026 swing
low near $63,000. The next 48 hours hinge on whether buyers can clear the
$80,000 resistance band or get rejected back into the $73,500-$78,000 range.
Follow
me on X for real-time crypto market analysis: @ChmielDk
Bitcoin’s
four-year cycle thesis, anchored to halving events in 2012, 2016, 2020 and
2024, has been the structural backbone of every major BTC bull and bear market.
Brandt’s argument is that those cycles are not pattern-recognition coincidence,
they are the most predictable rhythm in any liquid asset of the past 15 years.
“Should
Bitcoin continue with the most remarkable cyclic patterns of any market in the
past 15 years, an investable low is scheduled for Sep/Oct 2026,” Brandt
wrote in an April 23 post on X. “That low might or might not penetrate the
Feb 2026 low.
Should Bitcoin continue with the most remarkable cyclic patterns of any market in the past 15 years, an investable low is scheduled for Sep/Oct 2026. That low might or might not penetrate the Feb 2026 low. The next high (should patterns continue) will be between $300k and $500k…
— The Factor Report (@PeterLBrandt) April 23, 2026
The next
high (should patterns continue) will be between $300k and $500k in Sep/Oct
2029.” Brandt added that he would announce tradable thrusts via his Factor
Report and BitcoinLive platforms.
The target
sits well above the institutional consensus. As the FinanceMagnates.com report from
April 2 detailed,
JPMorgan’s structural model points to $240,000-$266,000, while Standard Chartered’s revised path now targets $500,000 by 2030
instead of 2026. eToro CEO Yoni Assia projects $250,000 within the current
cycle, as I covered
in my previous analysis.
The
Brandt thesis rests on three pillars worth separating from the standard
“$1M Bitcoin” calls:
- The framework treats halving
cycles, not macro events, as the dominant driver of Bitcoin ‘s multi-year
price action - The $300K-$500K target is
conditional, not unconditional, which separates it from open-ended bull
projections - A confirmed September-October
2026 low is required first, with potential downside below February’s
sub-$63,000 print
Why Brandt Says This Is
Not The Bottom Yet
Brandt’s
response to a chart from JDK Analysis arguing for a “Short
Re-Accumulation” structure was unequivocal. “This does not look like
a bottom,” Brandt replied to the post. The chart he was responding to
showed repeated rejections at local highs, fading volume on each push, and an
invalidation level near $80,500.
JDK
acknowledged the conditional nature of the call. “As long as bulls fail to
show clear strength and follow-through, the current low does not qualify as a
strong bottom. This is purely a probabilistic view!” the analyst wrote.
The setup pointed to continuation lower as the higher-probability path absent a
clean break above resistance.
Brandt also
amplified chartist Aksel Kibar, calling him the most accomplished pure
classical chart analyst alive today. “Sometimes I get criticized by
followers who have a position and want to see updates confirming that position
on ‘adjusting’ the boundaries,” Kibar wrote. “Well, as the market
offers new information we need to adjust. We can’t be dogmatic about our
analysis. What looks like a wedge, can morph into a channel.”
The
technical concerns supporting the “not yet” thesis cluster around
three points:
- Bitcoin still trades below the
365-day average near $87,000 - Volume has faded on each push
toward the upper boundary of the current channel - The morphing wedge-to-channel
structure has rejected price at the upper boundary multiple times
Bitcoin Technical
Analysis: $80K Resistance, $73,500 Support
Bitcoin
briefly tested $79,500 during the Asian session on Monday, April 27, 2026,
before sellers rejected the move and pushed price back below $78,000.
My chart
shows the rally over the past two weeks has cleared the upper boundary of the
prior consolidation, which I had marked at $75,000 and which had capped every
advance attempt since early March. That level held as support on first retest,
which is technically constructive.
Bitcoin technical analysis. Source: Tradingview.com
The
resistance picture above current price is stacked. The $80,000 zone aligns with
the November 21 swing lows and last week’s local highs. Above that, the
200-period moving average sits at $82,700, the level that separates the
prevailing bearish trend from a confirmed bullish reversal.
As the FinanceMagnates.com report from
April 9 noted, the
$80,000 breakout test has been the controlling question for BTC since the Iran
ceasefire short squeeze.
Until the
200 EMA flips, my base case is continued sideways action inside a wider
$73,500-$82,700 range, with the directional bias tilting toward the upper bound
only on a sustained close above $80,000. A rejection here would shift focus
back to the support layers below.
|
Level |
Type |
Notes |
|
$82,700 |
Resistance / 200 EMA |
Bull/bear trend separator |
|
$80,000 |
Resistance |
Last |
|
$75,000 |
Reclaimed support |
Broken to |
|
$73,500 |
Support / 50 EMA |
First |
|
$66,000 |
Support |
March/April 2026 swing lows |
|
$61,000-$63,000 |
Support |
Lower |
If $73,500
fails, the path opens toward $66,000 and ultimately the $61,000-$63,000 zone
where Brandt’s “investable low” could form. As the FinanceMagnates.com report from
April 15 detailed,
the $60,000 floor scenario remains live as long as price stays below the 200
MA.
Bitcoin Price Predictions:
From $500K Bull Case To $50K Bear Risk
The
institutional forecast range for Bitcoin remains exceptionally wide, reflecting
the depth of disagreement on cycle interpretation. The $300,000-$500,000 number
from Brandt is not unprecedented on this site.
A $300,000 call option on Deribit was a top pick in the crypto
options market last cycle, as I wrote in earlier coverage on
FinanceMagnates.com. What is different in Brandt’s framing is the conditional
structure and the multi-year horizon.
|
Source |
Target |
Notes |
|
Peter Brandt |
$300K-$500K |
Sep/Oct |
|
Standard Chartered |
$500,000 |
Revised to 2030 from prior 2026 |
|
JPMorgan |
$240K-$266K |
Long-term structural |
|
eToro / Yoni Assia |
$250,000 |
2026 cycle target |
|
$1,000,000 |
Long-term, no timeline |
|
|
Carol |
$75K-$150K |
2026 high-volatility range |
|
Galaxy / Alex Thorn |
“Tough to predict” |
2026 base case |
|
$50,400 |
2026 bear |
The
forecasts split cleanly along time horizon and methodology lines.
For now,
the resistance at $80,000-$82,700 is the level that matters. Until it breaks,
my analysis treats Brandt’s $500,000 target as a long-horizon scenario, not an
active trade.
FAQ
Can Bitcoin really hit
$500,000 by 2029?
Peter
Brandt’s projection of $300,000 to $500,000 by September-October 2029 is
conditional on Bitcoin’s four-year cycle pattern continuing to hold. Brandt
explicitly framed the target as scenario-dependent, not a base case. Standard
Chartered also targets $500,000, but pushed its timeline back to 2030. The
target requires sustained ETF inflows, no major macro disruption, and
confirmation of the 2026 cycle low first.
What is Bitcoin’s price
today?
Bitcoin
traded at approximately $77,650 per coin on Monday, April 27, 2026, slipping
roughly 1% on the day after testing $79,500 during the Asian session. The
cryptocurrency remains 38% below its October 2025 all-time high near $126,000,
but has reclaimed the $75,000 level that had capped every advance since early
March 2026.
Why does Peter Brandt say
Bitcoin has not bottomed?
Brandt
cited the absence of strong follow-through buying, fading volume on rallies,
and rejections at the upper boundary of the current channel. He responded to a
JDK Analysis chart with “This does not look like a bottom.” His
four-year cycle framework calls for an investable low in September-October 2026
that may or may not penetrate the February 2026 low near $63,000.
What are Bitcoin’s key
support and resistance levels?
Resistance
sits at $80,000 (last week’s high), $82,700 (200 MA), and the $126,000 all-time
high. Key supports include $75,000 (reclaimed mid-April), $73,500 (50 EMA),
$66,000 (March/April lows), and $61,000-$63,000 (lower consolidation, February
2026 low). The 200 MA at $82,700 separates the bearish trend from a confirmed
bullish reversal.
How high can Bitcoin go in
2026?
Institutional
forecasts for 2026 cluster between $75,000 and $250,000. Carol Alexander
projects a $75K-$150K range. Standard Chartered targets $150,000 for year-end
2026. eToro’s Yoni Assia sees $250,000. Canary Capital’s bear case targets
$50,400 if 2026 is the cycle’s bear leg. The wide range reflects deep
disagreement on whether 2026 is a mid-cycle correction or a bear market.
Bitcoin (BTC) traded at $77,650 per coin on Monday, April 27, 2026, slipping 1% after testing
$79,500 during the Asian session, the highest level in roughly two and a half
months.
The
pullback came two days after veteran trader Peter Brandt published a multi-year
Bitcoin price prediction targeting a $300,000 to $500,000 cycle peak by
September-October 2029, conditional on the four-year halving rhythm that has
defined BTC since 2011 continuing to hold.
Brandt also
flagged that his framework calls for one more investable low in
September-October 2026, which may or may not penetrate the February 2026 swing
low near $63,000. The next 48 hours hinge on whether buyers can clear the
$80,000 resistance band or get rejected back into the $73,500-$78,000 range.
Follow
me on X for real-time crypto market analysis: @ChmielDk
Bitcoin’s
four-year cycle thesis, anchored to halving events in 2012, 2016, 2020 and
2024, has been the structural backbone of every major BTC bull and bear market.
Brandt’s argument is that those cycles are not pattern-recognition coincidence,
they are the most predictable rhythm in any liquid asset of the past 15 years.
“Should
Bitcoin continue with the most remarkable cyclic patterns of any market in the
past 15 years, an investable low is scheduled for Sep/Oct 2026,” Brandt
wrote in an April 23 post on X. “That low might or might not penetrate the
Feb 2026 low.
Should Bitcoin continue with the most remarkable cyclic patterns of any market in the past 15 years, an investable low is scheduled for Sep/Oct 2026. That low might or might not penetrate the Feb 2026 low. The next high (should patterns continue) will be between $300k and $500k…
— The Factor Report (@PeterLBrandt) April 23, 2026
The next
high (should patterns continue) will be between $300k and $500k in Sep/Oct
2029.” Brandt added that he would announce tradable thrusts via his Factor
Report and BitcoinLive platforms.
The target
sits well above the institutional consensus. As the FinanceMagnates.com report from
April 2 detailed,
JPMorgan’s structural model points to $240,000-$266,000, while Standard Chartered’s revised path now targets $500,000 by 2030
instead of 2026. eToro CEO Yoni Assia projects $250,000 within the current
cycle, as I covered
in my previous analysis.
The
Brandt thesis rests on three pillars worth separating from the standard
“$1M Bitcoin” calls:
- The framework treats halving
cycles, not macro events, as the dominant driver of Bitcoin ‘s multi-year
price action - The $300K-$500K target is
conditional, not unconditional, which separates it from open-ended bull
projections - A confirmed September-October
2026 low is required first, with potential downside below February’s
sub-$63,000 print
Why Brandt Says This Is
Not The Bottom Yet
Brandt’s
response to a chart from JDK Analysis arguing for a “Short
Re-Accumulation” structure was unequivocal. “This does not look like
a bottom,” Brandt replied to the post. The chart he was responding to
showed repeated rejections at local highs, fading volume on each push, and an
invalidation level near $80,500.
JDK
acknowledged the conditional nature of the call. “As long as bulls fail to
show clear strength and follow-through, the current low does not qualify as a
strong bottom. This is purely a probabilistic view!” the analyst wrote.
The setup pointed to continuation lower as the higher-probability path absent a
clean break above resistance.
Brandt also
amplified chartist Aksel Kibar, calling him the most accomplished pure
classical chart analyst alive today. “Sometimes I get criticized by
followers who have a position and want to see updates confirming that position
on ‘adjusting’ the boundaries,” Kibar wrote. “Well, as the market
offers new information we need to adjust. We can’t be dogmatic about our
analysis. What looks like a wedge, can morph into a channel.”
The
technical concerns supporting the “not yet” thesis cluster around
three points:
- Bitcoin still trades below the
365-day average near $87,000 - Volume has faded on each push
toward the upper boundary of the current channel - The morphing wedge-to-channel
structure has rejected price at the upper boundary multiple times
Bitcoin Technical
Analysis: $80K Resistance, $73,500 Support
Bitcoin
briefly tested $79,500 during the Asian session on Monday, April 27, 2026,
before sellers rejected the move and pushed price back below $78,000.
My chart
shows the rally over the past two weeks has cleared the upper boundary of the
prior consolidation, which I had marked at $75,000 and which had capped every
advance attempt since early March. That level held as support on first retest,
which is technically constructive.
Bitcoin technical analysis. Source: Tradingview.com
The
resistance picture above current price is stacked. The $80,000 zone aligns with
the November 21 swing lows and last week’s local highs. Above that, the
200-period moving average sits at $82,700, the level that separates the
prevailing bearish trend from a confirmed bullish reversal.
As the FinanceMagnates.com report from
April 9 noted, the
$80,000 breakout test has been the controlling question for BTC since the Iran
ceasefire short squeeze.
Until the
200 EMA flips, my base case is continued sideways action inside a wider
$73,500-$82,700 range, with the directional bias tilting toward the upper bound
only on a sustained close above $80,000. A rejection here would shift focus
back to the support layers below.
|
Level |
Type |
Notes |
|
$82,700 |
Resistance / 200 EMA |
Bull/bear trend separator |
|
$80,000 |
Resistance |
Last |
|
$75,000 |
Reclaimed support |
Broken to |
|
$73,500 |
Support / 50 EMA |
First |
|
$66,000 |
Support |
March/April 2026 swing lows |
|
$61,000-$63,000 |
Support |
Lower |
If $73,500
fails, the path opens toward $66,000 and ultimately the $61,000-$63,000 zone
where Brandt’s “investable low” could form. As the FinanceMagnates.com report from
April 15 detailed,
the $60,000 floor scenario remains live as long as price stays below the 200
MA.
Bitcoin Price Predictions:
From $500K Bull Case To $50K Bear Risk
The
institutional forecast range for Bitcoin remains exceptionally wide, reflecting
the depth of disagreement on cycle interpretation. The $300,000-$500,000 number
from Brandt is not unprecedented on this site.
A $300,000 call option on Deribit was a top pick in the crypto
options market last cycle, as I wrote in earlier coverage on
FinanceMagnates.com. What is different in Brandt’s framing is the conditional
structure and the multi-year horizon.
|
Source |
Target |
Notes |
|
Peter Brandt |
$300K-$500K |
Sep/Oct |
|
Standard Chartered |
$500,000 |
Revised to 2030 from prior 2026 |
|
JPMorgan |
$240K-$266K |
Long-term structural |
|
eToro / Yoni Assia |
$250,000 |
2026 cycle target |
|
$1,000,000 |
Long-term, no timeline |
|
|
Carol |
$75K-$150K |
2026 high-volatility range |
|
Galaxy / Alex Thorn |
“Tough to predict” |
2026 base case |
|
$50,400 |
2026 bear |
The
forecasts split cleanly along time horizon and methodology lines.
For now,
the resistance at $80,000-$82,700 is the level that matters. Until it breaks,
my analysis treats Brandt’s $500,000 target as a long-horizon scenario, not an
active trade.
FAQ
Can Bitcoin really hit
$500,000 by 2029?
Peter
Brandt’s projection of $300,000 to $500,000 by September-October 2029 is
conditional on Bitcoin’s four-year cycle pattern continuing to hold. Brandt
explicitly framed the target as scenario-dependent, not a base case. Standard
Chartered also targets $500,000, but pushed its timeline back to 2030. The
target requires sustained ETF inflows, no major macro disruption, and
confirmation of the 2026 cycle low first.
What is Bitcoin’s price
today?
Bitcoin
traded at approximately $77,650 per coin on Monday, April 27, 2026, slipping
roughly 1% on the day after testing $79,500 during the Asian session. The
cryptocurrency remains 38% below its October 2025 all-time high near $126,000,
but has reclaimed the $75,000 level that had capped every advance since early
March 2026.
Why does Peter Brandt say
Bitcoin has not bottomed?
Brandt
cited the absence of strong follow-through buying, fading volume on rallies,
and rejections at the upper boundary of the current channel. He responded to a
JDK Analysis chart with “This does not look like a bottom.” His
four-year cycle framework calls for an investable low in September-October 2026
that may or may not penetrate the February 2026 low near $63,000.
What are Bitcoin’s key
support and resistance levels?
Resistance
sits at $80,000 (last week’s high), $82,700 (200 MA), and the $126,000 all-time
high. Key supports include $75,000 (reclaimed mid-April), $73,500 (50 EMA),
$66,000 (March/April lows), and $61,000-$63,000 (lower consolidation, February
2026 low). The 200 MA at $82,700 separates the bearish trend from a confirmed
bullish reversal.
How high can Bitcoin go in
2026?
Institutional
forecasts for 2026 cluster between $75,000 and $250,000. Carol Alexander
projects a $75K-$150K range. Standard Chartered targets $150,000 for year-end
2026. eToro’s Yoni Assia sees $250,000. Canary Capital’s bear case targets
$50,400 if 2026 is the cycle’s bear leg. The wide range reflects deep
disagreement on whether 2026 is a mid-cycle correction or a bear market.


