Two weeks ago, Geoffrey Kendrick published a careful note titled “The Low Is Almost In.” It laid out three specific conditions that could push Bitcoin below the recent $59,770 low. It walked clients through what would need to break for the bear case to extend. It explicitly said accumulation was a better strategy than declaring the low printed.
On June 12, Kendrick stopped hedging. Standard Chartered’s Global Head of Digital Assets Research issued a follow-up declaration that took the gloves off entirely: “Crypto winter is over.” Bitcoin’s cycle bottom was printed at $59,000.
The shift in tone matters because it represents one of the most significant institutional positioning calls of 2026. Kendrick isn’t a permabull crypto influencer issuing target-of-the-week predictions. He’s the lead crypto analyst at one of the largest international banks in the world, and his calls have been among the most accurate in the cycle. When he reverses his own bearish guard rails to declare a bottom, the institutional research community pays attention.
Bitcoin is currently trading at approximately $64,252, up 1.14% in 24 hours. Ethereum is at $1,677. Solana is at $68.14. The market has been quietly recovering from the $59,770 low established on June 4, and Kendrick’s call effectively codifies the recovery thesis. Either he’s making the most prescient call of the year or he’s about to be embarrassed by the FOMC meeting on Tuesday and Wednesday.
The next 96 hours will decide which.
What Changed Between the Two Notes
The shift from cautious accumulation guidance to bottom declaration happened because of specific developments that resolved Kendrick’s earlier “ifs.”
In the original framework, three conditions stood between Bitcoin and a deeper market low. ETF outflows accelerating beyond current levels. The Federal Reserve delivering a hawkish surprise. Bitcoin dominance breaking below 52-54%. Kendrick had said none of these were likely to materialise, but he kept them as risk factors that could invalidate the bottom call.
In the past two weeks, the first condition reversed. Ethereum ETFs finally broke their 17-day outflow streak on June 5. Bitcoin ETFs stabilised. Total Bitcoin held across spot ETFs remained above 650,000, well above the level Kendrick had identified as the capitulation threshold. The institutional selling that had defined May and early June lost its momentum without progressing into the structural exit that would have justified deeper bearishness.
The second condition shifted from worst-case toward base-case. Markets are now pricing 97-98% probability of a rate hold at the June 17-18 FOMC meeting, with 1.7-2.6% probability of a cut and effectively zero probability of a hike. The hawkish surprise scenario that Kendrick worried about has been replaced by either neutral hold or potentially dovish surprise positioning. Even hawkish hold language at the meeting wouldn’t deliver the kind of shock that could break the cycle low.
The third condition never materialised. Bitcoin dominance has remained above 60% throughout the recent volatility. Crypto capital has consolidated within BTC rather than fleeing the asset class entirely. The “broad capitulation” signal that Kendrick was watching for never appeared.
With all three conditions failing to materialise, Kendrick’s “almost in” framework converted naturally into “it’s done.” The bottom call is the logical evolution of his earlier framework, not a separate piece of analysis. The structural conditions that would have invalidated the bottom thesis didn’t develop. The thesis stands.
The Catalysts Behind the Reversal
Beyond the resolved “ifs,” Kendrick identified specific catalysts that supported the bottom declaration. Each one adds an additional layer of support to the recovery thesis.
The potential US-Iran peace deal is the most immediate catalyst. Trump’s Saturday announcement that the memorandum will be signed Sunday, with the Strait of Hormuz reopening immediately, would crash oil prices and reduce the inflation pressure that has crushed crypto since February’s escalation. Even if Sunday’s exact timeline slips, the diplomatic momentum is real and the geopolitical premium that weighed on risk assets is collapsing.
The SpaceX IPO completed without crashing crypto. The largest IPO in history happened on June 12 with $250 billion in demand and a successful 19% first-day gain. The feared liquidity drain from crypto into SpaceX never materialised. Bitcoin held above $63,000 throughout the IPO week. The structural test that bears had been pointing to as a potential crash trigger came and went without producing the predicted damage.
ETF holder rebalancing finalised. After 17 consecutive days of Ethereum ETF outflows and 13 days for Bitcoin ETFs, the selling pressure exhausted itself. The major institutional rebalancing that happened during May and early June is now largely complete. The institutions that were going to reduce crypto exposure have done so. The next phase will be defined by either new inflows or continued stability rather than further capitulation selling.
The macro picture has stopped deteriorating. May CPI came in at 4.2%, in line with expectations rather than spiking higher. The hot PPI at 6.5% raised concerns about future inflation but didn’t deliver an immediate shock. The Fed is unlikely to deliver any hawkish surprise at Tuesday’s meeting. The “everything getting worse” dynamic that defined late May and early June has shifted to “things stopping getting worse,” which is the precondition for actual recovery.
For Kendrick, these factors converging in the same two-week window provided the evidence needed to convert his accumulation guidance into a definitive bottom call. The asymmetric risk-reward that he highlighted in his earlier note has now resolved in favour of the bullish thesis.
The $100,000 Year-End Target
Standard Chartered’s official price targets haven’t changed substantively. Kendrick maintains a $100,000 year-end target for Bitcoin, which would represent a 56% rally from current levels in less than seven months. The bank has also maintained its $4,000 year-end target for Ethereum, revised down from the earlier $7,500 forecast.
The path from $64,000 to $100,000 isn’t smooth in Kendrick’s framework. It requires several specific developments. The Iran peace deal needs to actually sign and produce sustained oil price relief. The FOMC needs to maintain neutral-to-dovish positioning rather than turning hawkish. The CLARITY Act needs to either pass the Senate floor or maintain credible progress through the summer. Continued ETF flow stabilisation is needed without reversal back to outflows.
If those conditions hold, the path to $100,000 could unfold faster than current pricing suggests. Bitcoin has historically moved rapidly during recovery phases following extreme fear readings. The Fear and Greed Index at 12 in early June matches the 2022 cycle bottom that preceded a 700% rally over three years. A more modest 56% rally over seven months from current levels is well within the range of post-extreme-fear historical performance.
If conditions deteriorate, the $100,000 target could prove too aggressive even if the cycle low has been printed. A failed Iran deal, a hawkish FOMC surprise, or a CLARITY Act failure could each individually push the recovery timeline into 2027 even if Bitcoin doesn’t make a new low. Time targets for crypto recoveries have historically been less reliable than direction targets.
The $4,000 Ethereum target represents an even larger percentage gain from current levels. ETH at $1,677 would need to nearly 2.4x to reach the target. That move requires resolution of Ethereum’s structural value accrual problem alongside the broader macro improvements. Kendrick has flagged this as the harder lift than Bitcoin’s recovery, which is why the bank cut the target from $7,500 earlier this year.
The Risks to the Bottom Call
Several scenarios could invalidate Kendrick’s declaration that the cycle low has been printed.
A Bank of Japan rate hike represents the most underappreciated risk. The BOJ has been gradually normalising monetary policy after decades of zero or negative interest rates. A larger-than-expected hike could unwind the yen carry trade that has been one of the largest sources of liquidity for risk assets globally. Analysts including those flagged in recent CoinMarketCap reporting have warned that BOJ tightening could pressure Bitcoin liquidity in ways that wouldn’t be visible until significant damage was done. Japan’s three megabanks’ parallel stablecoin push reflects the country’s broader financial transformation, but the rate policy element remains a wild card.
A failed Iran deal scenario could push Bitcoin back below $60,000. Trump has announced peace deals multiple times in 2026, with previous announcements followed by either delays or renewed escalation. If Sunday’s signing doesn’t happen and another military incident occurs, the market would face renewed geopolitical pressure on top of the macro uncertainty heading into the FOMC.
A hawkish FOMC surprise on Tuesday-Wednesday could break Kendrick’s thesis. While market pricing assigns minimal probability to rate hikes, Warsh is delivering his first decision as Fed Chair, and his policy approach remains genuinely unknown. A dot plot showing officials pencilling in hikes for late 2026 or 2027 could shock markets despite the consensus expectation for stability.
A CLARITY Act failure could remove the regulatory catalyst that Kendrick has cited as supporting institutional rebalancing. If the bill stalls past the summer recess or fails on the floor, the regulatory uncertainty that has constrained institutional crypto positioning would persist for months or potentially years.
Each of these scenarios individually carries low probability. The combination of all of them occurring simultaneously is even lower probability. But Kendrick’s earlier “almost in” framework specifically maintained these as risk factors precisely because individual low-probability events can combine in ways that produce outcomes the base case didn’t anticipate.
What Investors Should Do With This
Kendrick’s call provides specific, actionable institutional research from one of the most credible analysts in crypto. How investors use that research depends on their existing positioning and risk tolerance.
For investors who reduced crypto exposure during the recent selloff, Kendrick’s call provides justification for rebuilding positions during the current recovery phase. The framework is explicit: structural conditions that would have invalidated the bottom thesis didn’t materialise, key catalysts are arriving, and the path to higher prices has more support than at any point during the recent decline. Dollar-cost averaging back into positions over the coming weeks aligns with the framework Kendrick is describing.
For investors who maintained positions through the decline, the call validates the conviction approach. Long-term holders sitting at record accumulation levels were positioned correctly for the recovery phase that Kendrick is now publicly endorsing. The position doesn’t need to be adjusted based on the call, but the validation reduces the psychological pressure of holding through the worst of the volatility.
For investors who didn’t have crypto exposure during the decline, Kendrick’s call provides a credible institutional framework for entering positions at current levels. The asymmetric risk-reward that he flagged in his earlier note still applies. Bitcoin at $64,000 with the cycle low potentially printed offers better entry pricing than Bitcoin at $80,000 or $100,000 if the bank’s targets prove correct.
The call also reinforces the broader theme that institutional research is becoming increasingly significant for crypto markets. Standard Chartered’s positioning, alongside research from JPMorgan, Goldman Sachs, BlackRock, and other major institutions, now shapes market sentiment in ways that retail-focused analysis didn’t a few years ago. Following the institutional research framework provides retail investors with access to analysis that previously was available only to private banking clients.
Whether Kendrick is right or wrong will be tested over the coming weeks. The FOMC meeting will provide the first major data point. The Iran deal signing or failure will provide the second. ETF flow patterns through the rest of June will reveal whether the institutional rebalancing has actually completed or whether more selling is ahead.
For now, the institutional positioning has shifted. The bank that said “almost in” two weeks ago is saying “it’s done” now. The market is about to find out which call was correct.
FAQ
What did Standard Chartered say about the crypto bottom?
Geoffrey Kendrick, Standard Chartered’s Global Head of Digital Assets Research, declared on June 12 that “crypto winter is over” and that Bitcoin’s cycle bottom was printed at $59,000 during the June 4 low. The call reverses the bank’s earlier February forecast that warned of a potential drop to $50,000 if ETF outflows accelerated. The bank maintains its $100,000 year-end Bitcoin target.
Why is this call significant?
Standard Chartered is one of the largest international banks providing institutional crypto research. Kendrick’s earlier call “The Low Is Almost In” had been carefully hedged with three conditions that could invalidate the bottom thesis. The June 12 declaration represents the resolution of those conditions in favour of the bullish thesis. As a credible institutional research call rather than a retail-focused prediction, the call influences how institutional investors position over the coming weeks.
What could prove the call wrong?
Several scenarios could invalidate the bottom declaration: a Bank of Japan rate hike unwinding the yen carry trade, a failed Iran peace deal returning geopolitical pressure, a hawkish surprise at the June 17-18 FOMC meeting, or a CLARITY Act failure removing the regulatory catalyst. Each scenario individually carries low probability, but the combination could push Bitcoin back below $60,000 and invalidate the cycle low call.
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.


















