Bitcoin is at risk of slide to $58,000 as 'restrictive' Fed policy and trade tensions weigh on crypto

Two market analysts on Tuesday warned the macro economic conditions, including the potential for a U.S. and E.U. tariff escalation and geopolitical tensions, are in place for bitcoin to drop in line with veteran trader Peter Brandt’s prediction.

Brandt, a futures trader since 1975 with more than 852,000 followers on X, said late Monday that bitcoin BTC$91,106.80 could fall to between $58,000 and $62,000 within the next two weeks.

In the X post, Brandt shared a chart showing key resistance for BTC at around $102,300, and said bitcoin remains in a bearish downtrend. “58k to $62k is where I think it is going $BTC. If it does not go there I will NOT be ashamed, so I do not need to see you trolls screen shot this in the future,” Brandt wrote.

Brandt tweet (X.com)

He added that he’s “wrong 50% of the time. It does not bother me to be wrong.”

Jason Fernandes, market analyst and co-founder of AdLunam, said Brandt’s target is possible, but emphasized that macro conditions may matter more than chart patterns.

“Brandt’s $58,000–$62,000 target is technically achievable, but charts aren’t the driver here, macro is,” Fernandes said.

Fernandes pointed to several factors that could contribute to the drop.

“U.S. inflation falling below 2% hasn’t translated into easier policy, as central banks remain cautious,” he said. “Any escalation in tariffs or geopolitical friction risks re-injecting inflation and delaying rate cuts. Tensions between the US and Europe over Greenland could also intensify, making a high-rate defensive stance more likely.”

As long as “rates remain restrictive, liquidity stays capped, a move back into the mid-$50,000 range for bitcoin is firmly in play,” Fernandes added.

Mati Greenspan, founder of Quantum Economics, also agreed with Brandt’s assessment of the odds.

“As Brandt stated there’s a 50-50 chance the price will drop that far. Technical setups matter, but after several years of Fed-driven liquidity withdrawal and one of the worst economies in decades, macro conditions are likely to matter more than any single chart pattern,” Greenspan said.

Fernandes shared one final observation: “To better gauge bitcoin's next move, “I’ll be watching developments around Greenland, the Federal Reserve, and U.S. interest rates.”

On a longer forecast, data from decentralized trading venues points to a 30% chance of bitcoin falling below $80,000 by June. There's similar positioning on Deribit, the largest centralized options exchange.

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Disclaimer: The content above is only the author's opinion which does not represent any position of Followin, and is not intended as, and shall not be understood or construed as, investment advice from Followin.
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