Wall Street’s expectations for Bitcoin have fallen once again. Citi lowered its 12-month bitcoin target to $82,000 from $112,000, pointing to weaker investor appetite, negative ETF flows and a slower regulatory environment in the United States.
This move is not another revision of forecasts. It shows how much of Bitcoin’s institutional thesis still hinges on a single input: whether spot ETFs can continue to attract fresh capital.
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TL;DR
Citi lowered its target for Bitcoin to $82,000 and lowered its Ether forecast to $2,240. The bank also reportedly cut its net ETF inflows target over the next 12 months to zero, down from an earlier expectation of $10 billion. This is a real headline for the cryptocurrency markets.
Target prices are basic to discuss. Flow assumptions are harder to ignore.
The Bitcoin ETF launch era gave the market a clear institutional demand story. For a time, this story helped keep prices higher and strengthen confidence. However, when flows become negative, the same structure works in the opposite direction. Analysts don’t just set price targets just because BTC has dropped. They mark them because the demand pattern behind the price target has changed.
This is what Citi’s revision reflects.
The ETF offering is being re-priced
The key issue is not whether Bitcoin can continue to trade above Citi’s target. Maybe. Cryptocurrency price targets are never a guarantee. What’s more essential is that one of the most closely watched demand channels in the market has become less reliable.
ETF flows were treated as a bridge between customary portfolios and Bitcoin exposure. If these flows weaken, the market will have to rely more on domestic cryptocurrency demand, buyers of corporate treasuries and long-term holders.
This may still be enough. But this makes the path more unstable.
Citi’s cut also comes as digital asset treasure companies come under closer scrutiny. If investors fear that buyers of treasury bonds may become sellers, market confidence in institutional accumulation weakens even further. That doesn’t mean a wave of forced selling is inevitable, but it does add another layer of caution.
Why it matters for Bitcoin traders
For traders, the message is uncomplicated: Bitcoin needs a fresh catalyst or fix for ETF flows.
A stronger macro background would be helpful. Similarly, there could be clearer regulations on US digital assets, a return to flows into ETFs, or renewed accumulation from long-term holders. Without one of them, the market may struggle to regain the same momentum it had when spot ETF demand dominated.
However, this does not mean that Citi’s $82,000 target is bearish in absolute terms. It is still above current prices. However, this is a significant reduction from the previous view and shows that institutional expectations are being reset.
Bitcoin has already endured multiple forecast downgrades. The question now is whether the ETF market can stop being the reason analysts are cutting their numbers and start being the reason they are pushing them up again.
This report was based on information contained in market forecasts by Reuters and Citi.
This article was written by the News Desk and edited by Samuel Rae.
