That’s the title of Geoffrey Kendrick’s note to clients on Thursday. Four words that cut through the noise during the worst week for crypto in 2026.
Kendrick is Standard Chartered’s Global Head of Digital Assets Research and one of the most closely watched institutional analysts in digital assets. His note arrived as Bitcoin traded near $62,562, down 51% from its all-time high, with $3.58 billion in ETF outflows over 12 consecutive days and $3 billion in total liquidations over the preceding 48 hours.
He didn’t sugarcoat the situation. “This week has been painful in crypto. There is really no other way of putting it.”
But Kendrick didn’t turn bearish. He laid out a framework of three specific “ifs,” conditions that would need to materialise for Bitcoin to make a new low. His argument is that none of them are likely to happen. And if they don’t, the bottom is either here or very close.
The bank’s year-end Bitcoin target remains $100,000. Its Ethereum target remains $4,000. Both require a 60% and 100% recovery respectively from current prices. Bold calls in a market where the Fear and Greed Index reads 12.
“I think when we look back at the end of 2026 with BTC at $100k and ETH at $4k we will say this was the buying zone we all wanted,” Kendrick wrote.
The Three “Ifs”
Kendrick’s framework identifies three triggers that could push Bitcoin below the current $61,000 to $63,000 zone to a genuine new market low. Each operates independently, but all three firing simultaneously would produce the worst-case scenario.
If ETF outflows continue accelerating. Spot Bitcoin ETFs have bled $3.58 billion over 12 straight days. That’s severe. But Kendrick argues the structural picture is better than the flow data suggests. Total BTC held by the 11 US-listed funds sits at approximately 674,000, down only 8,000 from the peak near 682,000. Cumulative net inflows since launch remain at $54.2 billion, roughly where they stood earlier in the year. The headline outflow numbers look catastrophic, but the actual amount of Bitcoin leaving the ETFs is relatively modest. If outflows accelerate beyond current levels and total ETF holdings drop below 650,000 BTC, that would signal genuine institutional capitulation rather than routine portfolio rebalancing. That hasn’t happened yet.
If the Fed delivers a hawkish surprise. The market is pricing in steady rates with a slight possibility of cuts later in 2026. If the June 17-18 FOMC meeting produces a hawkish dot plot with no rate cut signals, it would remove a key tailwind that the market has been counting on. Higher-for-longer rates make non-yielding assets like Bitcoin less attractive and push institutional capital toward bonds and AI stocks that offer returns crypto can’t match. This is the “if” that Kendrick considers most uncertain, because Warsh’s intentions remain genuinely unknown.
If Bitcoin dominance breaks below 52-54%. Bitcoin dominance currently sits above 60%. When dominance is high, it means capital is concentrated in BTC rather than spread across altcoins. That concentration typically reflects a “flight to quality” within crypto rather than broad-based selling. If dominance drops below 52-54%, it historically signals that even Bitcoin holders are giving up, converting to cash rather than rotating into altcoins. That kind of broad capitulation would indicate the selloff has entered a more dangerous phase.
Kendrick’s view is that none of these three conditions are likely to be triggered. The ETF structure is holding. The Fed is more likely to stay neutral than turn hawkish. And dominance above 60% shows that crypto capital is consolidating in BTC rather than fleeing entirely.
Why Kendrick Thinks the Bottom Is Close
Beyond the three “ifs,” the note laid out three reasons the market may already be near its floor.
Strategy’s 2022 precedent. When Strategy last sold Bitcoin in December 2022, it offloaded 704 BTC at roughly $18,000. Two days later, it bought back 810 BTC at a lower price. The sale happened within weeks of the absolute cycle bottom. Kendrick expects the same pattern to repeat with the 32 BTC sold this week, projecting a potential buyback of up to 100 times the amount sold. A confirmed purchase as early as next Monday would, in his view, serve as a tentative signal that the low is in.
ETF holdings are “stronger than feared.” In February, Kendrick warned Bitcoin could drop to $50,000 if ETF outflows picked up significantly. That scenario never materialised. Despite 12 days of headline outflows, the actual structural damage to ETF holdings has been minimal. The gap between 682,000 BTC at peak and 674,000 BTC today is just 1.2%. “That tells me the ETF structure is stronger than I feared back in the winter,” he wrote.
Bitcoin is trading near the 200-week SMA. The 200-week simple moving average is the long-term trend line that has marked the floor of every previous Bitcoin bear market. When BTC touched this level in November 2022, the price was approximately $16,000. It subsequently rallied to $126,000. When it touched it during the COVID crash in March 2020, the rally that followed was equally dramatic. Bitcoin currently sits near this moving average again. The pattern doesn’t guarantee a bottom, but it places the current price in a historical context that has preceded major recoveries every time it’s occurred.
The Tension in the Analysis
Kendrick’s note contains an honest tension that separates it from the typical “this is the bottom, buy now” calls flooding crypto social media.
He explicitly says there are “a lot of ifs” in his framework and that “accumulation is a better strategy than trying to outright declare the low has been printed.” That’s a crucial distinction. He’s not calling the exact bottom. He’s saying the probability of being near a bottom is high enough that systematic buying makes more sense than waiting for certainty.
Certainty in markets arrives after the bottom has already passed. By the time every indicator confirms the turn, the price is usually 20-30% higher than the low. Kendrick is arguing for buying into uncertainty, accepting that the price could still drop another 10-15% while maintaining conviction that the 12-month outlook favours accumulation at current levels.
That approach works for institutional investors with long time horizons and the ability to absorb short-term drawdowns. It’s a much harder strategy for retail investors who may not have the financial cushion to watch their holdings decline further before recovering.
What Investors Should Actually Do With This
Kendrick’s framework is useful not because it tells you Bitcoin’s exact bottom but because it gives you three specific indicators to monitor.
Watch the ETF holdings number, not the daily flow headlines. If total BTC held across spot ETFs stays above 650,000, the institutional structure is intact. If it drops below that level, the selling has crossed from rebalancing into capitulation.
Watch the June 17-18 FOMC meeting. Hawkish surprises push the bottom further out. Dovish signals or neutral positioning confirm that the macro environment isn’t getting worse, which is all the market needs to stabilise.
Watch Bitcoin dominance. Above 60% means crypto capital is consolidating in BTC rather than leaving the ecosystem. Below 52-54% means something more concerning is happening.
If all three indicators hold, Kendrick’s thesis says the bottom is either here or within a single-digit percentage of here. If any of them break, the risk of a deeper decline increases and patience becomes more important than accumulation.
A $100,000 year-end target from a bank that has been one of crypto’s most accurate institutional forecasters during this cycle is worth taking seriously. So is the acknowledgement that getting from $62,000 to $100,000 requires navigating “a lot of ifs” that haven’t been resolved yet.
The buying zone is open. The question is whether you trust the map.
FAQ
What are Standard Chartered’s three conditions for a new Bitcoin low?
Geoffrey Kendrick identified three “ifs”: ETF outflows continuing to accelerate beyond current levels (total holdings dropping below 650,000 BTC), the Fed delivering a hawkish surprise at the June 17-18 FOMC meeting with no rate cut signals, and Bitcoin dominance breaking below 52-54%, which would signal broad crypto capitulation rather than rotation. He believes none of these are likely to materialise.
Does Standard Chartered think Bitcoin has bottomed?
Kendrick titled his note “The Low Is Almost In” and said accumulation makes more sense than trying to call the exact bottom. He pointed to Strategy’s 2022 precedent (sold then quickly bought back more), resilient ETF holdings (674,000 BTC vs 682,000 peak), and Bitcoin trading near its 200-week SMA where previous bear markets ended. The bank maintains a $100,000 year-end target.
Should I buy Bitcoin at current prices?
Kendrick’s framework suggests the probability of being near a significant bottom is high, but he explicitly cautioned that “there are a lot of ifs” and recommended accumulation over trying to time the exact low. The approach suits long-term investors who can absorb further short-term declines. The three indicators to watch are ETF total holdings, the FOMC outcome, and Bitcoin dominance levels.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Cryptocurrency investments carry significant risk. Always conduct your own research before making any investment decisions.

















