Futures
Access hundreds of perpetual contracts
TradFi
Gold
One platform for global traditional assets
Options
Hot
Trade European-style vanilla options
Unified Account
Maximize your capital efficiency
Demo Trading
Introduction to Futures Trading
Learn the basics of futures trading
Futures Events
Join events to earn rewards
Demo Trading
Use virtual funds to practice risk-free trading
Launch
CandyDrop
Collect candies to earn airdrops
Launchpool
Quick staking, earn potential new tokens
HODLer Airdrop
Hold GT and get massive airdrops for free
Pre-IPOs
Unlock full access to global stock IPOs
Alpha Points
Trade on-chain assets and earn airdrops
Futures Points
Earn futures points and claim airdrop rewards
Promotions
AI
Gate AI
Your all-in-one conversational AI partner
Gate AI Bot
Use Gate AI directly in your social App
GateClaw
Gate Blue Lobster, ready to go
Gate for AI Agent
AI infrastructure, Gate MCP, Skills, and CLI
Gate Skills Hub
10K+ Skills
From office tasks to trading, the all-in-one skill hub makes AI even more useful.
GateRouter
Smartly choose from 30+ AI models, with 0% extra fees
Q2 2026 Bitcoin Valuation: Why $143k Still Remains Achievable?
Original Title: 26Q2 Bitcoin Valuation Report: $143k—2x Upside
Original Source: Tiger Research
Translated by: AididiaoJP, Foresight News
Original Author: Tiger Research
Original Source:
Reprinted: Mars Finance
Key Highlights
The macro environment remains supportive, despite a slowdown in pace: Global M2 hits a record high of $13.44 trillion, and Bitcoin ETF capital flows have turned into net inflows for the first time in 14 months. However, the oil shock triggered by the Iran conflict pushed March’s CPI up to 3.3%, narrowing the Federal Reserve’s rate cut path.
On-chain Bitcoin indicators are shifting from undervaluation toward early equilibrium: Key on-chain metrics have exited the panic zone seen in Q1. Currently priced at $70.5k, about 13% below the long-term holder average entry cost of $78k. Breaking this level would be a major signal of a short-term trend reversal.
The $143k target price and 2x upside potential remain valid: Based on a neutral benchmark of $132.5k, adjusted with -10% for fundamentals and +20% for macro factors.
While the target has been lowered from $185.5k in Q1, the significant retracement in spot prices actually broadens the real upside potential from current levels.
The macro tailwinds persist, but momentum has slowed
Since the release of the Q1 report, Bitcoin has fallen about 27%, with April’s average hovering around $70.5k.
The Iran conflict introduced a new variable, but the overall macro environment remains favorable. It’s not the direction that has changed, but the speed.
Record-high liquidity, but limited effective transmission to Bitcoin
As of February 2026, global M2 continues to expand to nearly $13.44 trillion, a record high. Yet, Bitcoin has declined 27% from Q1. Liquidity and prices are moving in opposite directions.
The source of liquidity explains this divergence. Over the past year, more than 60% of M2 growth in the four major economies (China, US, Eurozone, Japan) came from China, thanks to the People’s Bank of China’s reserve requirement ratio cuts and a formal shift toward easing in Q1.
The US contribution is only 10%. The issue is that liquidity from China has limited channels to enter the Bitcoin market.
Domestic crypto trading restrictions remain, and indirect channels via Hong Kong and Singapore mainly serve institutional funds. Global liquidity is at a historic peak, but the share reaching Bitcoin markets is shrinking.
Iran conflict slows down Fed rate cuts
Due to constrained liquidity transmission from China, US dollar liquidity remains the main driver for Bitcoin. But even this has been delayed by the Iran conflict.
After the US and Israel launched strikes on Iran on February 28, the Strait of Hormuz was blocked. Brent crude surged to $118 per barrel in mid-March, and Dubai crude hit a record high of $166 per barrel. This shock directly pushed up inflation. The US March CPI rose from 2.4% in February to 3.3%, a two-year high. The Fed’s rate cut prospects have narrowed accordingly. The March dot plot revised down expectations to only one rate cut by 2026.
Nevertheless, the easing stance has not changed. In mid-April, the Strait of Hormuz partially reopened, and oil prices fell sharply back to around $90. Core CPI remains stable at 2.6%, indicating the shock has not fully propagated through the economy.
President Trump officially nominated Kevin Warsh as the next Fed Chair at the end of January, with Senate confirmation hearings underway. Powell’s term ends on May 15, and the easing bias is likely to persist. The number of rate cuts may decrease, but the direction remains unchanged.
Institutional capital flows are reversing
The outflows that drove Q1 declines have begun to reverse. Bitcoin spot ETFs experienced their worst monthly outflows since launch in November 2025 and have been in net outflow for five consecutive months. However, since March, monthly net inflows have turned positive. By mid-April, cumulative capital flows for the year turned positive, with total assets under management rising to $96.5 billion.
Corporate accumulation is also accelerating. Strategy spent $2.54 billion buying 34,164 BTC in a single week (April 13-19), increasing total holdings to 815,061 BTC. However, the number of companies participating in this trend has not significantly increased.
Macro indicators revised down to +20%
Structural tailwinds remain intact: liquidity expansion, policy easing bias, institutional capital flow returning to positive, and progress on the US CLARITY Act. Recent headwinds—such as the Iran-induced oil shock and slowing Fed rate cuts—partially offset these positives. Macro indicators for Q2 have been revised downward by 5 percentage points from Q1, to +20%.
From undervaluation to early equilibrium
On-chain metrics have exited the extreme panic zone, transitioning toward undervaluation and early balance. Key indicators like MVRV-Z, NUPL, and aSOPR have moved out of the panic region seen in Q1, entering early recovery stages.
While a sharp rally during panic rebounds is unlikely, historical data shows that one-year average returns from this zone have consistently been double digits. The risk-reward ratio remains highly favorable at this point.
Notably, the average cost basis for short-term holders (STH) is gradually declining.
This indicates speculative capital is exiting, while new buyers are accumulating at lower prices. The timing aligns with ETF net inflows restarting and Strategy’s large-scale buying, supporting the view that institutional investors are continuously accumulating in discounted zones, lowering their average entry costs.
The key risk level is $54k, which is the network’s average cost basis. Falling below this would put the entire network into unrealized losses, representing an extreme bottom scenario. The strongest resistance is at $78k, coinciding with the long-term holder average entry cost.
Current price at $70.5k is about 13% below this resistance, with many recent short-term entrants in unrealized loss. A decisive break above $78k in the near term warrants close attention.
Surface growth, underlying stagnation
In the first half of April, Bitcoin’s daily trading volume reached 564k transactions, up 37.9% year-over-year. The surface data looks impressive, but the details tell a different story.
Active addresses declined to 428k, down 13.2% YoY and 4.2% MoM. The average transfer size dropped to 1.19 BTC, a 34.1% decrease from the previous quarter’s 1.80 BTC. Transaction count increased, but participation and per-transaction value both declined.
This pattern reflects a small number of users repeatedly making small transfers, rather than broad economic activity. Much of the volume increase may come from exchange deposits and mechanical flows, not genuine growth.
The Q1 report maintained fundamental metrics at 0%, based on expectations of BTCFi ecosystem expansion. By Q2, this thesis has significantly weakened.
According to The Block’s “2026 Digital Asset Outlook,” Bitcoin’s Layer 2 TVL has fallen 74% year-to-date, BTCFi’s total TVL declined 10%, and now accounts for only 0.46% of Bitcoin’s total supply (91,332 BTC). While protocols like Babylon and Lombard have seen some growth, the overall ecosystem has contracted.
Fundamental metrics revised down to -10%
Surface growth has not translated into real network expansion, and the underlying data supporting BTCFi has weakened. The balance of positive and negative signals seen in Q1 has been broken. In Q2, fundamental metrics are revised downward from 0% to a bottom line of -10%.
Target price of $143k, with 2x upside potential
Using the Time Value of Money (TVM) method, with an average price in early April 2026, the neutral benchmark is set at $132.5k. After adjusting for -10% fundamentals and +20% macro factors, the 12-month target price is $143k.
This is about 23% lower than the $185.5k target in Q1. However, the actual upside potential has increased. Based on the average price, the upside expands from +93% in Q1 to +103% in Q2.
Lower target price does not imply pessimism. The macro outlook and on-chain structure still support a medium- to long-term bullish thesis.
Three short-term watch points:
· Decisive break above the network’s mid-term equilibrium at $78k;
· Continued net ETF inflows;
· Fed policy shift after geopolitical risk eases.
If these three conditions are met simultaneously, the $143,000 target remains achievable.