Fidelity director warns of bitcoin's year-long winter in 2026

Jurien Timmer, Fidelity's director of global macro, has turned bearish on bitcoin, predicting a year-long downturn in 2026 after the cryptocurrency's recent peak. He points to historical four-year cycles aligning closely with bitcoin's October high near $125,000. In contrast, Timmer highlights gold's robust bull market performance throughout 2025.

Jurien Timmer, a longtime bitcoin advocate and Fidelity's director of global macro, has shifted to a more cautious stance on the cryptocurrency. In a recent post on X, he argued that bitcoin's bull run may have concluded, based on its alignment with past four-year halving cycles in both price and timing.

Bitcoin reached an all-time high of around $125,000 in October, after approximately 145 months of cumulative rallying. This peak fits the pattern observed in previous cycles, according to Timmer. He anticipates that bitcoin bear markets, known as 'winters,' typically endure for about a year, suggesting 2026 could serve as a 'year off' for the asset. Key support levels are expected between $65,000 and $75,000.

"While I remain a secular bull on bitcoin, my concern is that bitcoin may well have ended another four year cycle halving phase, both in price and time," Timmer wrote. He further explained, "If we visually line up all the bull markets, we can see that the October high of $125k after 145 months of rallying fits pretty well with what one might expect. Bitcoin winters have lasted about a year, so my sense is that 2026 could be a year off for bitcoin. Support is at $65,000 to $75,000."

Timmer drew a stark comparison with gold, which has enjoyed a strong year in 2025, rising roughly 65% year-to-date and surpassing global money supply growth. During its recent correction, gold retained most of its gains, a sign of its ongoing bull market strength. He does not foresee an immediate reversal in the performance gap between the two assets.

This outlook comes amid bitcoin's current price around $88,157, reflecting recent weakness after the October surge.

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Split-image illustration contrasting shiny rising gold bars and charts with a falling, cracked Bitcoin price screen, emphasizing Bitcoin's underperformance vs. gold into 2025.
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Bitcoin extends gold underperformance into end of 2025

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Building on the 45% BTC/gold ratio slide through mid-December, gold surged 70% for the year while bitcoin fell 6% YTD amid persistent weakness. Bitcoin traded around $87,000, down 22% in Q4 after an October rout erased $1T from crypto markets, pressured by strong U.S. data and bearish technicals.

As 2026 begins, cryptocurrency markets face uncertainty following a disappointing 2025, where Bitcoin fell 5.7% overall and 23.7% in the fourth quarter. Industry experts debate whether traditional four-year cycles still apply, pointing instead to macroeconomic factors and institutional adoption as key drivers. While risks of a deep bear market persist, some foresee structural consolidation leading to higher price floors.

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Building on earlier 2026 predictions like The Motley Fool's $250,000 target, new models project a 70% probability that Bitcoin will reach a new all-time high in 2026, surpassing its 2025 peak of $126,000 from current levels around $89,000—a 42% rise. This outlook challenges the traditional four-year halving cycle in favor of macro influences.

Bitcoin experienced a sharp whipsaw on Wednesday, rallying above $90,000 before tumbling back to weekly lows below $86,000. The decline mirrored a Nasdaq drop driven by fading enthusiasm for artificial intelligence stocks. Traders note an oversold market amid year-end positioning.

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Bitcoin's price has declined to $87,500, wiping out all gains for the year 2026 so far. The cryptocurrency reversed an earlier gain from Wednesday, resuming its downward trend.

Building on recent debates about crypto's maturing cycles, analysts highlight three major factors—led by institutional adoption—that are expected to drive Bitcoin and cryptocurrency prices throughout 2026, potentially replacing traditional halving-driven patterns.

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Bitcoin fell sharply to a 15-month low of around $63,000-$67,000 on February 5, 2026, extending a year-to-date decline of 23% that erased early 2026 gains, including a January drop to $87,500. The sell-off has wiped over $2 trillion from the global crypto market since October 2025 peaks, despite pro-crypto policies from President Trump. Analysts attribute the plunge primarily to Trump's nomination of hawkish former Fed governor Kevin Warsh as Federal Reserve chair, alongside ETF outflows and weakening stock markets.

 

 

 

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