【Blockchain Rhythm】Regarding whether Bitcoin can rise from the current $90,000 to $150,000 this year, industry opinions are divided.
Macro researcher Luke Gromen recently stated that, in the absence of major market catalysts, institutional investors are unlikely to push Bitcoin strongly higher. He explained that institutions typically wait and see before acting, and without clear event-driven triggers, it’s hard to chase higher entries. For institutions to truly take action, the progress of the US CLARITY Act and whether the Federal Reserve continues to cut interest rates are key factors. However, he also warned of risk scenarios—if a full-scale trade war or economic recession erupts, Bitcoin could even fall near $60,000, and many holding companies might be forced to cut losses.
But data presents a different signal. CryptoQuant CEO Ki Young Ju pointed out that institutional demand is far from being so cold. Last year alone, institutional investors bought approximately 577,000 Bitcoins, equivalent to $53 billion in real money. Grayscale also emphasized that institutional entry combined with clearer regulatory environments are the two core driving forces behind Bitcoin’s new highs.
From the actual market performance, the real investment behavior of institutions seems to tell us more than commentary opinions.
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AirdropAutomaton
· 20h ago
Institutions operate like this, deciding their actions based on market sentiment. Whoever acts first, survives first.
Let's wait for the CLARITY bill to be implemented; anything said now is pointless.
Where does the number 57.7 come from? The data seems incomplete.
Breaking 90,000 is just talk; 60,000 is also not a dream.
Luke is right, without catalysts, institutions would have already left. Don't overthink it.
The real question is, will the interest rate cuts continue? That’s the key point.
Data and opinions are conflicting; the market will decide...
Forget it, I’m just holding, whether it goes up or down.
Institutions are indifferent? Then who is buying...
It seems crypto analysts love to contradict each other. So annoying.
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GateUser-44a00d6c
· 20h ago
Will institutions really move? I just want to see if it's just talk or real money coming in.
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RamenDeFiSurvivor
· 20h ago
Will institutions really be that obedient? It seems like they only act as armchair strategists afterward.
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Blockwatcher9000
· 20h ago
The institution is pretending not to see again, with the number 57.7 just sitting here.
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just_here_for_vibes
· 20h ago
Do institutions really obediently take over? I doubt it.
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Luke is right, just waiting for a catalyst.
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57.7 Bitcoins? I haven't seen the full data, want to know what comes next.
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Trade war is really coming, the crypto market will be finished, don't talk about 150,000.
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So basically, it's still about lacking a story. Without a story, no one will hype.
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Ki Young Ju is probably just making excuses, can't you see institutions are gradually offloading?
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Cutting interest rates is the key, everything else is just empty talk.
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From 90,000 to 150,000? That requires how many catalysts.
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If Bitcoin really hits 60,000, a bunch of people will have to run.
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Why does it feel like analysts are fighting each other every day? Don't trust anyone.
Are institutions driving Bitcoin past 90,000? Analysts hold differing opinions
【Blockchain Rhythm】Regarding whether Bitcoin can rise from the current $90,000 to $150,000 this year, industry opinions are divided.
Macro researcher Luke Gromen recently stated that, in the absence of major market catalysts, institutional investors are unlikely to push Bitcoin strongly higher. He explained that institutions typically wait and see before acting, and without clear event-driven triggers, it’s hard to chase higher entries. For institutions to truly take action, the progress of the US CLARITY Act and whether the Federal Reserve continues to cut interest rates are key factors. However, he also warned of risk scenarios—if a full-scale trade war or economic recession erupts, Bitcoin could even fall near $60,000, and many holding companies might be forced to cut losses.
But data presents a different signal. CryptoQuant CEO Ki Young Ju pointed out that institutional demand is far from being so cold. Last year alone, institutional investors bought approximately 577,000 Bitcoins, equivalent to $53 billion in real money. Grayscale also emphasized that institutional entry combined with clearer regulatory environments are the two core driving forces behind Bitcoin’s new highs.
From the actual market performance, the real investment behavior of institutions seems to tell us more than commentary opinions.