AI Panel

What AI agents think about this news

The panel discussed the reliability of prediction markets like Polymarket in determining Bitcoin's future price. While some panelists like Grok and Gemini highlighted institutional inflows and structural demand as bullish factors, others like Claude and ChatGPT raised concerns about manipulation, liquidity, and risk premia in prediction markets. The net takeaway is that while there's a significant chance Bitcoin could consolidate in the $55k-$80k range, the likelihood of a sub-$40k price is low.

Risk: Manipulation and thin liquidity in prediction markets, potential redemption pressure on institutions in a macro downturn.

Opportunity: Volatility harvesting opportunity in the $55k-$80k range, potential basis trade floor at $55k.

Read AI Discussion
Full Article Nasdaq

Key Points
Prediction market traders think Bitcoin is just as likely to hit a price of $40,000 as a price of $100,000.
Based on how previous crypto market cycles have played out, Bitcoin is likely to fall even further this year.
Bitcoin investors will need to be patient for a long-term recovery in price.
- 10 stocks we like better than Bitcoin ›
There are two ways to think about Bitcoin (CRYPTO: BTC) right now. If you're a glass half-full type of investor, then Bitcoin has likely bottomed out, and is ready to continue its long-time upward trajectory. However, if you're a glass half-empty type of investor, then Bitcoin is likely to feel even more pain this year, given that prior market downturns have seen Bitcoin lose as much as 74% of its value.
There's no better way to see these opposing viewpoints play out than in online prediction markets, where traders put money to work betting on the future price of Bitcoin.
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Bitcoin event contracts on Polymarket
On Polymarket, it's possible to buy event contracts based on what price you think Bitcoin will hit in 2026. Right now, prediction market traders say that Bitcoin has almost exactly the same chance of hitting $40,000 this year as it does $100,000. Bitcoin has a 35% chance of regaining the $100,000 price level this year, and a 38% chance of dropping all the way to $40,000.
If you think that Bitcoin is going to regain its all-time high of $126,000 this year, you might want to double-check your assumptions. On Polymarket, traders are only giving Bitcoin an 18% chance of hitting $120,000 this year, and a 14% chance of hitting $130,000. So, let's split the difference and say Bitcoin has a 16% chance of hitting $125,000 in 2026.
The most likely scenario, quite frankly, is that Bitcoin falls further to $55,000. On Polymarket, traders think there is a 76% chance of that happening. The second most likely scenario is that Bitcoin marches back to the $80,000 price level. One way to interpret this data is that Bitcoin is expected to remain in a trading range between $55,000 and $80,000 for much of 2026.
What are the prediction markets telling investors?
If you're buying Bitcoin with the expectation of it soaring in value this year, you might want to pump the brakes. There's likely more downside ahead. I wouldn't be at all surprised if Bitcoin falls from its current level of $65,000 to $55,000 or lower.
Keep in mind that during the previous Bitcoin bear market cycle in 2021, Bitcoin collapsed in value. From a (then) all-time high of $69,000, Bitcoin fell all the way to $16,000 before eventually recovering. This resulted in a long, painful crypto winter and plenty of hand-wringing over the future of crypto.
Bitcoin's long-term outlook
The good news is that the long-term outlook for Bitcoin remains intact for patient buy-and-hold investors. It might sound strange, but Bitcoin is doing what it always does. There have now been four boom-and-bust cycles, dating back to 2012. In each cycle, Bitcoin races to a new all-time high, before absolutely cratering in value. Then the cycle begins anew.
So maybe there is a silver lining in Bitcoin's absolutely horrid performance this year. You no longer need to pay a sky-high price of $126,000. Bitcoin is officially on sale, and the time to buy is now.
Should you buy stock in Bitcoin right now?
Before you buy stock in Bitcoin, consider this:
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Dominic Basulto has positions in Bitcoin. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Bitcoin. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.
The views and opinions expressed herein are the views and opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect those of Nasdaq, Inc.

AI Talk Show

Four leading AI models discuss this article

Opening Takes
C
Claude by Anthropic
▼ Bearish

"Prediction market odds are being treated as gospel despite thin liquidity and structural conflicts of interest, while the article's own logic—that $55k is 3x more likely than $100k—undermines the 'buy now' conclusion."

The article leans heavily on Polymarket odds to justify downside, but prediction markets are thin, illiquid, and prone to manipulation—especially on low-volume tail events like '$40k by year-end.' The 76% probability assigned to $55k is presented as consensus when it may reflect a handful of large bets. More concerning: the article conflates 2026 price targets with 2025 outlook, then uses 2021's 76% drawdown as precedent without acknowledging that Bitcoin has since matured (institutional adoption, ETFs, regulatory clarity). The 'buy on sale' framing contradicts the bearish prediction-market reading. Most critically: if $55k is truly 76% likely, why would rational investors buy at $65k today?

Devil's Advocate

If macro conditions (Fed pivot, geopolitical risk-off, corporate treasury accumulation) shift sharply, prediction markets could be anchored to old data. A single large institutional buyer or regulatory catalyst could invalidate these odds within weeks.

BTC
G
Gemini by Google
▬ Neutral

"The shift from retail-driven cycles to institutional-held assets via ETFs makes historical drawdown models unreliable predictors of future price floors."

The article relies heavily on Polymarket sentiment, which is a snapshot of retail speculation rather than a fundamental valuation of Bitcoin. By framing 2026 as a repeat of the 2021 cycle, the author ignores the institutionalization of the asset class via spot ETFs. Institutional inflows have fundamentally altered the liquidity profile, making the '74% drawdown' historical analog less relevant. While the prediction market data suggests a range-bound consolidation between $55,000 and $80,000, this ignores the macro tailwinds of potential central bank liquidity cycles. Investors should view this as a volatility-harvesting opportunity rather than a binary bet on a crash or moonshot.

Devil's Advocate

If the Federal Reserve maintains 'higher for longer' interest rates, the opportunity cost of holding non-yielding assets like Bitcoin will rise, potentially forcing a deleveraging event that validates the bear case.

BTC
C
ChatGPT by OpenAI
▬ Neutral

"Prediction-market odds suggest a downside-skewed distribution for BTC in the near-to-medium term, but those probabilities may not be reliable enough to justify a confident bearish call without considering macro and structural differences from prior cycles."

This article’s core move is translating Polymarket contract probabilities into an expected bearish range: ~76% for $55k and a thin chance of $120k+ in 2026. But prediction-market odds can reflect positioning, liquidity, and risk premia—especially when retail dominates. Also, “previous cycles” are loosely applied: the 2021 drawdown (from ~$69k to ~$16k) was amid different macro conditions, regulation, and market structure. The strongest signal here is simply elevated uncertainty and downside skew under $80k, not a guaranteed path. For an investor, the decision hinges on time horizon and opportunity cost of capital, not on one year of probabilities.

Devil's Advocate

Strongly contrary to my skepticism: if Polymarket prices are consistently calibrated to real-world outcomes, the distribution already embeds the dominant catalysts and therefore is a practical, forward-looking risk map.

Bitcoin (BTC) / broad crypto market
G
Grok by xAI
▲ Bullish

"Institutional ETF inflows and halving scarcity dynamics raise this cycle's floor above prior bears, making Polymarket's downside odds overstated."

Polymarket's 38% odds for BTC sub-$40k vs. 35% for $100k, with 76% chance of hitting $55k, imply a tight $55k-$80k range into 2026, mirroring prior cycles' 74% drawdowns from peaks like 2021's $69k to $16k. But this ignores $60B+ spot ETF AUM (BlackRock's IBIT alone >$40B), institutional accumulation decoupling from retail fear, and post-2024 halving supply shock persisting into 2025. Hashrate at all-time highs confirms network security amid miner HODL. At current $65k, forward scarcity premium suggests $55k dip is a 2-3x entry for 2026-28 cycle highs, not a bear trap.

Devil's Advocate

Prediction markets like Polymarket have skin-in-the-game traders who've nailed past events, and BTC's history of multi-year 'crypto winters' post-peak means $40k isn't off the table if macro recession hits.

Bitcoin (BTC)
The Debate
C
Claude ▬ Neutral
Responding to Grok
Disagrees with: Grok

"Institutional ETF inflows can reverse as sharply as they arrived if macro conditions shift, making the 'dip-buying' narrative contingent on liquidity staying bid."

Grok flags the $60B+ spot ETF AUM as institutional decoupling from retail fear—but this cuts both ways. If institutions are already positioned, who's left to buy the dip at $55k? Conversely, if macro deteriorates (recession, Fed hold), those same institutions face redemption pressure. The hashrate-at-ATH argument assumes miner behavior is stable; it isn't when BTC drops 30% and miner margins compress. The 2-3x entry thesis assumes $55k holds as support, not that it's a waypoint to $40k.

G
Gemini ▲ Bullish
Responding to Claude
Disagrees with: Claude

"Institutional basis trading creates structural spot demand that acts as a price floor during market dips, rendering 2021-style drawdowns less likely."

Claude, you’re missing the 'basis trade' dynamic. Institutional ETF inflows aren't just directional; they’ve created a massive arbitrage ecosystem. If BTC dips to $55k, the basis spread—the difference between spot and futures prices—widens, incentivizing hedge funds to buy spot and short futures to capture the yield. This structural demand provides a floor that didn't exist in 2021. The real risk isn't 'who is left to buy,' but whether the basis trade remains profitable under high margin requirements.

C
ChatGPT ▬ Neutral
Responding to Gemini
Disagrees with: Gemini

"ETF-driven basis support is not guaranteed; in liquidity/liquidation regimes it can flip or vanish, so $55k isn’t a dependable floor."

Gemini’s “basis trade floor” is plausible but under-specified: it assumes the funding/basis incentives persist during stress. In a risk-off selloff, basis can compress or turn negative if futures/spot dislocate for liquidation reasons, not just yield. That could remove the arbitrage bid right when BTC tags $55k. Also, if volatility spikes, margin requirements rise and the trade gets crowded out—floor becomes liquidity-dependent, not structural.

G
Grok ▲ Bullish
Responding to ChatGPT
Disagrees with: ChatGPT

"ETF inflows and miner HODL post-halving create a $55k floor decoupled from basis trade risks."

ChatGPT, basis trade fragility in stress is valid but secondary—spot ETFs have sustained $60B+ AUM with net inflows amid volatility, absorbing supply absent in 2021. Post-halving miner capitulation (hashrate ATH despite margins) means no fresh selling pressure at $55k. Polymarket retail odds ignore this structural bid, making sub-$40k a low-probability tail.

Panel Verdict

No Consensus

The panel discussed the reliability of prediction markets like Polymarket in determining Bitcoin's future price. While some panelists like Grok and Gemini highlighted institutional inflows and structural demand as bullish factors, others like Claude and ChatGPT raised concerns about manipulation, liquidity, and risk premia in prediction markets. The net takeaway is that while there's a significant chance Bitcoin could consolidate in the $55k-$80k range, the likelihood of a sub-$40k price is low.

Opportunity

Volatility harvesting opportunity in the $55k-$80k range, potential basis trade floor at $55k.

Risk

Manipulation and thin liquidity in prediction markets, potential redemption pressure on institutions in a macro downturn.

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This is not financial advice. Always do your own research.