Bitcoin (BTC-PKR) may still have significant upside ahead. A recent analysis by CryptoQuant contributor PelinayPA places a 55 percent probability that the current bull cycle top has not yet been reached, despite the token’s more than 13 percent drop from its October 6 peak near 126,000 dollars.
One of the strongest bullish signals is that coins held six months or longer remain largely unmoved. According to CryptoQuant data, this suggests long term holders are not capitulating. Mid cycle behaviour is often characterised by holding rather than selling.
The report also notes an uptick in 0 to 1 day coin inflows to exchanges, indicative of short term traders or new entrants reacting to volatility. However, long term holder behaviour remains stable. Analysts argue the current price behaviour around 108,000 dollars reflects consolidation rather than a top. A possible dip toward 102,000 dollars could be healthy within an ongoing uptrend.
Data from Reuters show that a significant portion of Bitcoin’s rally is now driven by institutional demand rather than speculative retail buying. ETF inflows reached record levels, open interest in futures rose to about 57 billion dollars, and the leverage ratio fell, indicating less risky, more capital backed positioning.
The 2025 Global Crypto Adoption Index by Chainalysis confirms that countries like India and the US are leading in crypto uptake, supporting the narrative of structural demand.
Multiple analysts foresee targets in the 150,000 to 250,000 dollar range for Bitcoin by the end of 2025, with long term potential even higher depending on institutional flows and supply dynamics.
In mid 2025 Bitcoin surpassed gold in year to date performance, reinforcing its narrative as a hedge and an alternative store of value.
According to on chain and market data, Bitcoin has a roughly 55 percent chance of remaining in its bullish phase. The shift toward institutional accumulation, global adoption, and structural demand provides a strong foundation.
However, there’s no certainty: Investors should use this as a strategic signal, not a guarantee, and remain disciplined in managing risk and expectations.