Bitcoin is holding strong above $70,000, trading around $71,000 on March 10, even as analysts debate whether it could eventually reach $500,000 per coin. The latest projections come from both Wall Street research and long-running Bitcoin valuation models, reviving discussion about how scarcity and institutional demand could shape the next phase of the market.
One of the most widely cited forecasts comes from Standard Chartered, whose digital assets research team has argued that Bitcoin could approach $500,000 by the end of the decade. The bank’s thesis centers on growing institutional adoption. The launch of spot Bitcoin ETFs in the United States, the expansion of custody infrastructure, and increased access through traditional brokerages are enabling pension funds, asset managers, and sovereign wealth funds to allocate to Bitcoin for the first time.
Standard Chartered analysts argue that even small portfolio allocations to Bitcoin across global investment funds could dramatically impact price because of the asset’s fixed supply. Bitcoin’s protocol caps total issuance at 21 million coins, and more than 20 million BTC have already been mined, leaving less than five percent of the supply still to be issued over the coming century.
The $500,000 discussion has also resurfaced through the work of PlanB, a pseudonymous analyst known for creating the Stock-to-Flow (S2F) model, which attempts to value Bitcoin using scarcity metrics similar to those used for commodities such as Gold. The model compares the total existing supply of an asset (the “stock”) with the rate at which new supply is produced (the “flow”).
In Bitcoin’s case, the halving cycle reduces new supply roughly every four years by cutting block rewards for miners in half. After the most recent halving, the network now produces only a fraction of the new coins that entered circulation during earlier cycles. According to the current Stock-to-Flow projection, Bitcoin could average roughly $500,000 during the 2024–2028 market cycle, with potential peaks ranging from $250,000 to $1 million if historical patterns repeat.
Supporters of the model argue that similar signals appeared during previous accumulation phases. Some investors point to 2015, when Bitcoin traded below $400 while the model indicated significant undervaluation. That period was followed by one of the largest bull markets in the asset’s history.
However, the model has also faced criticism from economists and market analysts after Bitcoin diverged from its predicted trajectory following the 2021 cycle peak. Critics argue the framework focuses heavily on supply scarcity while giving less weight to demand dynamics, macroeconomic conditions, and evolving market structure.
Despite the debate, several market indicators continue to point toward tightening supply conditions. Data cited in recent market reports shows Bitcoin balances held on exchanges have fallen back to levels last seen in 2019, suggesting fewer coins are readily available for traders to sell.
At the same time, institutional participation in Bitcoin markets continues to grow through exchange-traded funds, corporate treasury allocations, and regulated custody services. As new demand meets a supply schedule that becomes increasingly scarce after each halving, analysts say the long-term price trajectory remains a central topic across both crypto markets and traditional finance.
Why This Matters
Bitcoin was designed as a scarce digital asset with a transparent issuance schedule. As more institutional capital enters the market while new supply continues to shrink, the question facing investors is no longer whether Bitcoin will remain relevant, but how much of the global financial system will ultimately allocate to it.