
Senior trader Peter Brandt reiterated his bearish outlook on Bitcoin’s 2026 price action, saying it’s unlikely to see a new all-time high this year, and that the timing for a new high could be pushed back to “Q2 2027.” He also warned that Bitcoin may test $60,000 again between September and October this year, and even dip to lower levels, arguing that this is when the current bear-market cycle would truly bottom out, after which the next bull market can begin.
In his latest remarks, Brandt acknowledged that his view has a “speculative” element, but he still clearly stated the following core position: “I don’t think 2026 will bring a new price peak; it may only appear in Q2 2027.”
He expects Bitcoin to retest lower levels again in the fall this year (September to October), and that the low formed then will mark the true end of the bear-market cycle: “That will be the bear-market cycle’s low point, and the new bull-market cycle will start from there.” In other words, the $60,000 annual low that Bitcoin hit in February 2026 is not, within Brandt’s framework, the final bottom—there remains the possibility of a deeper pullback afterward.
This assessment is consistent with his earlier public warning about the rising wedge (Rising Wedge) sell signal, suggesting that he believes the current technical structure has not yet formed a sufficient foundation to support a new all-time high.
Brandt’s short stance is not an isolated viewpoint; other industry participants have issued similar warnings:
Anthony Scaramucci (Scaramucci): pointed out that there is a “self-fulfilling prophecy effect” from the four-year cycle—when enough institutional whales believe in the four-year-cycle rule, their trading actions themselves will reinforce the cycle’s outcome; the heightened market fear sentiment is precisely a quantitative reflection of this dynamic.
Analyst Ted: said Bitcoin has “lost its uptrend.” The current price action is highly similar to what it looked like in January 2026—then Bitcoin fell by about 39% from its recent high; if history repeats, the downside target points to around $45,000.
Technical signals: The Fear and Greed Index for Bitcoin has continued to stay in the “extreme fear” range, remaining below 25 for nearly 60 straight days—the longest pessimistic cycle since the 2022 FTX collapse.
So far, Bitcoin has been under dual macro pressure from the U.S.-Iran conflict and the Federal Reserve’s high interest rates. Earlier today, Trump ended the Middle East conflict and released positive signals; Bitcoin briefly moved up. However, multiple analysts believe this is only a temporary rebound driven by geopolitical optimism sentiment, lacking structural bullish support.
If Brandt’s timeline holds, the bottoming window in September to October implies that the market still needs to consolidate for several months within the current range; the support band from $60,000 to $45,000 will be the main battleground where bulls and bears clash.
Brandt said that Bitcoin’s current price action matches mid-bear-market characteristics; the rising wedge sell signal has not yet been fully digested; and the macro environment (high interest rates and geopolitical pressure) continues to suppress risk-asset valuations. He predicts that the complete bear-market cycle low will appear in September to October, and that before then, the price lacks the structural basis needed to trigger a new all-time-high push.
Analyst Ted’s 39% drawdown scenario is based on a historical analogy to similar price action in January 2026; as of now, there has been no technical confirmation. Bitcoin is currently trading around $67,599. If it breaks below the key $60,000 support, the next level of defense directly below is the prior year’s low point. If $60,000 fails to hold, then $45,000 would become the next meaningful technical support target.
Brandt expects this bear-market cycle to bottom out in September to October, and then the next bull market will begin. Ultimately, the final new all-time high will appear in “Q2 2027.” This framework is broadly consistent—structurally and logically—with Bitcoin’s four-year cycle theory (peaking about 12 to 18 months after each halving), but the final realization depends on how the macro environment and geopolitical situation actually evolve.