Analyst Predicts No Altcoin Season in 2026

In Crypto Regulations
December 23, 2025

Analyst Predicts No Altcoin Season in 2026

In 2026, an altcoin rally is unlikely to occur, with most capital expected to flow into established major cryptocurrencies. This view was expressed by Jeff Ko, the chief analyst at CoinEx Research, in an interview with Cointelegraph.

“Retail investors expecting a rising tide to lift all boats will be disappointed. We predict the absence of a traditional altcoin season. Instead, liquidity will be ruthlessly selective, flowing only into cryptocurrency ‘blue chips’ with real adoption,” he stated.

Due to divergent central bank policies, the growth of the global money supply will have a “moderately positive impact” on the digital asset market in the coming year. Overall, Bitcoin’s historical sensitivity to the dynamics of the M2 aggregate “has decreased since the launch of the ETF, and the correlation has diminished,” the expert added.

The base scenario from CoinEx forecasts Bitcoin reaching $180,000 in 2026.

Divergent Forecasts

Historically favourable, the fourth quarter sees Bitcoin ending with a price drop of approximately 20%, marking the second-worst performance ever.

“This usually means the market has shed excess risk and weak positions. Thus, it does not guarantee automatic growth in 2026, but historically, cycles ending with a major reset tend to have better conditions for building strength,” noted analysts from Milk Road.

Renowned trader and technical analyst Peter Brandt emphasized that Bitcoin is a unique asset, having experienced “five parabolic advances on a logarithmic scale,” followed by declines of at least 80%.

The current cycle in the leading cryptocurrency is not yet complete, he added. This implies a potential price drop to around $25,000.

Brandt expects the peak of the next bull market no earlier than September 2029.

At the time of writing, Bitcoin is trading at approximately $87,600, although the price exceeded $90,000 the previous day.

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Hourly chart of BTC/USD on Binance. Source: TradingView.

Experts largely attribute the price drop to expectations of a massive options expiry on digital gold and Ethereum on the Deribit exchange. On December 26, contracts worth over $28.5 billion, representing about half of the open interest on the platform, are set to expire.

Deribit’s Chief Commercial Officer Jean-David Pekino noted that in Bitcoin, $1.2 billion is concentrated in put options at a strike price of $85,000. If sellers exert pressure, the closing of contracts could negatively impact the asset’s spot prices.

According to the manager, traders are mostly rolling over protective positions to early 2026, indicating concerns about the leading cryptocurrency’s trajectory.

Earlier, Saad Ahmed from Gemini explained the reason why an altcoin season has not materialized.

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Steven M. Crimmins is a cryptocurrency strategist and freelance writer who has followed the blockchain industry since Bitcoin’s early days. Known for his sharp analysis of altcoins and trading strategies, Steven provides Satoshi News Africa readers with market-focused content grounded in research. He is especially interested in how African traders are adopting crypto as an alternative to traditional markets. Steven is also a podcast host, where he discusses emerging technologies and investment trends.