I heard an interesting forecast from Bloomberg analysts—turns out Bitcoin could crash to $10,000 if a recession hits the U.S. Sounds crazy, but let’s figure out what’s behind it.



Mike McGlone, a strategist at Bloomberg Intelligence, made a rather grim scenario. His logic is this: a drop in crypto could be a sign of deeper financial problems. He points to several worrying signals. The market capitalization of U.S. stocks relative to GDP has reached a century high. At the same time, the volatility of the S&P 500 and Nasdaq is at eight-year lows. This mismatch, in his view, could end badly.

In addition, McGlone believes that the famous mantra “buy on the downturn,” which worked after 2008, may stop working. The crypto bubble, he says, is already bursting. Gold and silver are gaining momentum at rates unseen in half a century. If this contagion spreads to stocks, then a recession would not be just a correction, but a serious systemic risk.

McGlone built a model by comparing Bitcoin (divided by 10 for scaling) with the S&P 500 index. Based on his calculations, if broad-market beta weakens, Bitcoin won’t hold above current levels. His base case assumes a pullback to $10,000 at a peak in the U.S. stock market.

But not everyone agrees with this pessimism. Jason Fernandez, an analyst at AdLunam, objects that this is too simplistic. Yes, a recession is serious, but markets can solve the problem of excess not only through a crash. There could be consolidation, rotation of assets, and erosion of inflation. A macroeconomic slowdown could lead to a correction up to $40,000–$50,000, not a systemic downturn.

Fernandez emphasizes that a drop to $10,000 would require a real systemic shock— a sharp contraction in liquidity, widening credit spreads, and forced deleveraging by funds. This is a recession plus financial shocks, not just a slowdown. Without a credit shock or a critical policy mistake, such a crash remains an unlikely tail risk.

So what’s happening now? Bitcoin is holding above $74,000. Global risk appetite has returned—Asian indices and the S&P 500 are recouping losses. A strong inflow into spot Bitcoin ETFs (exceeding $56 billion) shows that institutional interest has not disappeared.

So McGlone’s forecast sounds convincing on paper, but reality is more complicated. Recession is a real risk, but not a verdict. The market may find other ways to adapt. The key is to watch macroeconomic indicators and not panic during corrections. On Gate, you can track the movement of major assets and get ready for different scenarios.
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