As of May 16, 2025, the price of Bitcoin (BTC) oscillated at a high level in the range of 103,000 to 105,000 US dollars, slightly lower than the historical high of 109,000 US dollars in January 2025, but still in a strong bull market structure. This price level reflects the market’s comprehensive game on the halving effect, macroeconomic policy adjustments, and institutional fund inflows. From a historical cycle perspective, after the fourth halving was completed in April 2024, Bitcoin gradually entered a price reassessment stage, continuing the rule of ‘four years one cycle,’ but the fluctuation range and the depth of institutional participation in this cycle have significantly increased.
The Bitcoin halving event drives price increases by suppressing the supply growth rate, but its impact typically lags 12-18 months. After the 2024 halving, the market generally expects an accelerated period of price increase in the second half of 2025. Historical data shows that after the previous three halvings, the average increase in Bitcoin price exceeded 300%, and this round of halving, combined with new variables such as ETF, may catalyze a more intense supply-demand imbalance.
The Fed’s expected interest rate cut (US inflation data lower than expected) and the easing of Sino-US trade relations have created a favorable environment for risk assets. Bitcoin’s ‘dual nature’ is highlighted at this stage: it serves as both a ‘digital gold’ against inflation and a high-growth asset in times of loose liquidity. With a Sharpe ratio of 1.72, it is second only to gold, becoming an important consideration for institutional allocation.
Since the approval of the spot Bitcoin ETF in 2024, institutional funds have continued to pour in, with a total inflow of over 50 billion US dollars. Despite the recent short-term fund outflows from ETFs (such as Fidelity’s FBTC with a single-day outflow of 96 million US dollars), the long-term allocation demand remains unchanged. At the same time, the fund diversion phenomenon of Ethereum ETF indicates that the market is shifting from a preference for a single asset to a diversified layout.
Analyst Apsk32’s ‘Power Curve’ model shows that if the market value of Bitcoin measured in ounces of gold maintains the current trend, the target price for 2025 could reach $220,000, with a breakthrough of $250,000 being an ‘exceeding expectation performance.’ After the price of gold rose to a historical high of $3,500 per ounce, the narrative of Bitcoin as ‘digital gold’ has been further strengthened. If it occupies 50% of the gold market value, the long-term price may approach one million dollars.
Technical indicator signals: Bitcoin RSI index is in the neutral to strong area (around 70), MACD maintains a bullish pattern, the price is far above the 50-day and 200-day moving averages, and the support level is stable at the $100,000 psychological barrier. Short-term pullback risks (such as the fear and greed index dropping from 73 to 70) coexist with the medium to long-term upward channel, forming a “high-level oscillation consolidation” pattern.
On-chain data and fund flow: The cumulative difference in spot active trading volume (CVD) has turned into buyer-led for the first time since March 2024. Institutions’ continued increase in ETF holdings may trigger supply tightening, driving prices above $110,000 in May.
Technically, if it effectively breaks through the resistance at $106,000, Bitcoin may challenge the range of $110,000 to $120,000; if it retraces to the support at $100,000, it will provide a buying opportunity on dips. Institutions generally predict a year-end target price of $120,000 to $150,000 (Standard Chartered), while the gold model points to a ‘reasonable upper limit’ of $220,000.
If Bitcoin gradually replaces the safe-haven function of gold, for every 10% increase in its market share, the price will correspondingly rise by about $180,000. Analyst Sam Callahan estimates that by 2030, if gold reaches $5,000 per ounce and Bitcoin occupies 50% of its market value, BTC price Or close to $924,000.
For investors, the current market requires a balance between long-term trends and short-term fluctuations:
Bitcoin’s price movement It is the resonance of technical, fundamental, and macro environments, as well as the result of market narratives and capital games. Despite the short-term consolidation pressure, the long-term value reassessment logic as a ‘non-sovereign hard asset’ remains unchanged. Investors need to build resilient strategies based on rational analysis in order to move forward steadily in the high Beta nature of the cryptocurrency market.