Bitcoin historically turns in its best performance of the year in October and November, leading to stellar Q4 results.
Based on data from online prediction markets, Bitcoin has a 1-in-3 chance of hitting $140,000 by the end of this year.
While gains of 25% or higher are within reach, investors need to remain wary of Bitcoin’s boom-and-bust nature.
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It’s getting late early for Bitcoin (CRYPTO: BTC). With just three months left in 2025, Bitcoin is nowhere close to where many experts thought it would be earlier in the year. Back in January, many analysts and investors were calling for Bitcoin to hit $200,000.
That might not happen this year, but there’s plenty of reason to think that Bitcoin could still hit a price target of $140,000 by the beginning of 2026. At today’s current price of $112,000, that represents a 25% rally in the price of Bitcoin.
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Bitcoin is known for turning in some rousing Q4 performances. In fact, if you look at Bitcoin’s historical returns during the period 2013-2024, the average performance in the fourth quarter of the year was a gain of 85%. By far, Q4 is the best quarter of the year for Bitcoin.
In some years, Bitcoin went absolutely parabolic at the end of the year. For example, back in 2020, Bitcoin soared by 168% in the final quarter of the year. In 2017, Bitcoin skyrocketed by 215%. And if you’re willing to trust the data from as far back as 2013, then Bitcoin absolutely hit it out of the park, with a dazzling return of 480%.
Once you dig into the statistical data, you can see exactly when things start to turn around for Bitcoin. Bitcoin typically turns in a blistering performance in October and November. So much so that some crypto traders refer to October as “Uptober.”
That being said, November actually ranks as the best month of the year for Bitcoin, with an average return of 46% during the period 2013-2024. October ranks second, with an average return of 22%.
All of which is to say — if you’ve been disappointed by Bitcoin’s lackluster performance in August and September, that’s simply following the historical pattern, and there may not be any real need for concern. Historically, Bitcoin has always turned in a middling to awful performance in August and September. Think of it as a veteran baseball slugger who always goes into a slump in September, before breaking out the late-season heroics when it matters the most.
In order to ground any Bitcoin prediction in reality, it’s helpful to look at the current data from the online prediction markets. There, traders are giving Bitcoin a 63% chance of regaining its all-time high of $125,000 by the end of the year.
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