Key Highlights

  • Standard Chartered's Geoffrey Kendrick declared Bitcoin's 5 June drop to roughly $59,000 the definitive cycle bottom, calling it the end of "crypto winter."
  • Charles Schwab's Jim Ferraioli independently identifies approximately $60,000 as a historically significant support level based on the 200-week moving average and miner production costs.
  • Standard Chartered maintains year-end targets of $100,000 for Bitcoin and $4,000 for Ethereum, while Schwab projects range-bound trading between $60,000 and $80,000 with no near-term bull market.
  • Standard Chartered attributes the bottom to two factors: more than $5.72 billion in spot Bitcoin ETF outflows tied to SpaceX IPO-related selling (now cleared), and easing inflation pressure from progress toward a US-Iran peace deal.
  • Schwab's $80,000 ceiling estimate is based on the average cost basis of buyers from the past 18 months, many of whom are sitting on roughly 50% losses and are likely to sell at breakeven if price recovers that far.
  • Bitcoin's historical four-year cycle would typically place a cycle bottom closer to a full year after the October 2025 peak — though an earlier-than-usual peak could mean the timeline has compressed.

With Bitcoin trading near $64,000 on 14 June, two of the most closely watched names in traditional finance have independently converged on the same price zone as structurally significant — even though they disagree sharply about what comes next. Standard Chartered has called $59,000 the definitive cycle low. Charles Schwab has identified roughly $60,000 as a historically meaningful floor. Both views place current prices just above what each institution considers a critical support zone, but the reasoning behind each call — and the conclusions drawn from it — diverge considerably.

Standard Chartered: "Winter Is Over"

In a research note published on 12 June, Standard Chartered's Global Head of Digital Assets Research, Geoffrey Kendrick, stated plainly that Bitcoin's drop to roughly $59,000 on 5 June marked the definitive cycle low, declaring that crypto winter had ended. The $59,000 level represents a 53% retracement from Bitcoin's October 2025 all-time high of $126,000.

Kendrick's reasoning rests on two macro developments rather than technical chart patterns. The first concerns the SpaceX IPO, which absorbed more than $5.72 billion in spot Bitcoin ETF redemptions since mid-May as investors liquidated crypto holdings to free up cash ahead of the listing. With SpaceX now trading publicly, that specific source of selling pressure has cleared. The second concerns progress toward a US-Iran peace deal ahead of the G7 summit, which has pushed Brent crude toward $87 per barrel, easing inflation pressure and cooling Treasury yields — both factors that had previously weighed on risk assets including Bitcoin.

Standard Chartered maintains year-end targets of $100,000 for Bitcoin and $4,000 for Ethereum, with Kendrick flagging Ethereum as structurally positioned to outperform Bitcoin as any recovery matures. Importantly, the bank frames this as a high-conviction call rather than a confirmed outcome. Three signals would need to materialise to validate $59,000 as a permanent floor: a return to net-positive US spot Bitcoin ETF inflows, renewed corporate treasury buying, and sustained stabilisation or decline in oil prices.

Charles Schwab: A Classic Bear Market With a Floor Near $60K

Schwab's framing of the same price zone is considerably more cautious. Jim Ferraioli, the firm's Director of Digital Currencies Research, describes Bitcoin's current condition as a textbook bear market — down roughly 50% from its highs, with sentiment thoroughly washed out.

Ferraioli identifies strong fundamental support near $60,000 for two distinct reasons. First, that level aligns with the 200-week moving average, which has historically held during major Bitcoin bear markets. Second, it sits just above the all-in production cost for the most efficient Bitcoin miners, estimated at around $16,000 per coin. He is careful to note that support levels do not prevent price from briefly trading below them — they mark a historically significant floor, not an impenetrable barrier.

Critically, Ferraioli does not anticipate a near-term bull market. Instead, he projects range-bound trading between $60,000 and $80,000, with the $80,000 level acting as a ceiling. That ceiling estimate is based on the average cost basis of buyers who entered the market over the past 18 months — many of whom are currently sitting on losses of roughly 50% and would likely sell to recoup their position if price recovered to their breakeven point, creating persistent selling pressure at that level.

Two Banks, One Level, Two Conclusions

The convergence here is notable precisely because of how the two institutions arrived at it. A desk focused on macro flows and a desk focused on fundamentals and technicals have independently identified the same $59,000 to $60,000 zone as structurally important, despite starting from entirely different analytical frameworks. Where they diverge is on what happens once that floor holds. Standard Chartered reads the zone as a launchpad for a recovery toward $100,000 by year-end. Schwab reads it as the lower bound of a months-long trading range capped at $80,000 by trapped supply from underwater buyers. For readers, the shared floor represents genuine analytical agreement — the disagreement begins entirely above that level.

The Four-Year Cycle: A Reason for Caution, and a Door Left Open

A longer-term framework is worth holding alongside both bank calls. Bitcoin has historically moved through a roughly four-year cycle tied to its halving schedule, with bull market peaks followed by year-long bear markets before the next upward leg begins. Bitcoin topped in October 2025, meaning the market is currently only around eight months past that peak. In prior cycles, bottoms have often arrived closer to a full year or more after the top — which would argue for some caution before concluding the low is already in.

However, the same framework leaves room for an earlier resolution. This cycle's peak arrived in October, earlier than the November-to-December tops that marked the conclusion of prior cycles. An earlier peak could plausibly mean an earlier bottom, compressing the overall timeline rather than extending it. If the cycle has indeed shifted forward by a month or two relative to history, the June low near $59,000 could sit closer to where a historical bottom would be expected to fall. The four-year pattern is not a reason to assume the worst has not yet arrived, but it does not rule out that it already has.

What Would Confirm Either Thesis

The signals worth monitoring over the coming weeks are concrete. A sustained return to positive net US spot Bitcoin ETF inflows, following the recent outflow streak, would represent the clearest demand-side confirmation. Renewed corporate treasury accumulation — the signal Standard Chartered is watching most closely — would echo the buying patterns that have supported prior cycle lows. On the macro side, continued stability or declines in oil prices tied to US-Iran negotiations would support Kendrick's thesis, while a breakdown in those talks would undermine it.

On the chart itself, holding above the $60,000 zone both institutions have flagged keeps the bottom thesis intact for either framework. A decisive break below that level would challenge both calls simultaneously. The two banks have identified the level that matters. Whether it holds — and what happens from there — is what the coming weeks will determine.

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