Benjamin Cowen’s July memo puts the next Bitcoin bottom in the fourth quarter of 2026. His seasonal math implies a floor near $44,000, and his framework has formally shifted into bottom-watch mode.
Cowen, a member of BeInCrypto’s Market Intelligence experts council, argues the reset now depends on time rather than a single price level. His projection lands inside the $44,000 to $47,000 zone that BeInCrypto’s models identified one week earlier.
The 2019 Analog Runs Out of Time
The core thesis of the memo compares the October 2025 top with the June 2019 top. Both peaks arrived on apathy rather than euphoria, and both printed weeks before quantitative tightening formally ended.
Bitcoin (BTC) has now spent 282 days in its drawdown. The 2019 analog bottomed at day 261, when the March 2020 pandemic crash reset every indicator at once.
Cowen treats that flush as an external shock, not a cycle mechanism. Because the analog expired without a similar event, he expects this reset to complete through time instead.
The current path sits at 0.520 of the October 2025 record above $126,000, a 48% decline. Meanwhile, retail attention never returned. New views across major crypto YouTube channels sit near 389,000, an order of magnitude below the 2021 peak near four million.
That reading fits the broader picture of washed-out crypto sentiment that BeInCrypto reported this week. Cowen calls it the apathy signature, and it separates this cycle from the euphoric tops of 2017 and 2021.
Midterm Years Save the Worst for Last
2026 is a midterm election year, historically the weakest of Bitcoin’s four-year cycle. The prior midterms in 2014, 2018, and 2022 all decayed through the second half, and none rallied into year-end.
July has typically been constructive in those years, and 2026 is tracking that tendency. However, August and September turned negative in all three prior midterms, with August losses between 15% and 18%.
Cowen’s year-to-date measure has bounced to 0.731, back above the midterm average. Applying the historical decay path would drag that reading to roughly 0.49 by year-end, which implies a price near $43,800.
He stresses the figure is an illustrative projection from three observations, not a target. Still, the direction was consistent across all three prior midterms.
Two of those cycles bottomed inside the midterm year itself, in December 2018 and November 2022. The 2014 cycle spilled into January 2015, which keeps early 2027 on the table.
The macro backdrop adds pressure. The Warsh Fed removed its easing bias while the energy-led disinflation fades, a combination that keeps real rates elevated into the same fourth-quarter window.
Why the On-Chain Reset Isn’t Done
On-chain data explains why Cowen doubts the low is already in. The MVRV Z-Score reads 0.395, and prior cycle bottoms formed only after the metric reset below zero.
That reset requires price to trade beneath the realized price; the market’s aggregate cost basis is near $53,000. The early-summer low of about $57,000 approached that level without reaching it.
His $43,800 estimate, therefore, sits inside the corridor between realized price and balanced price at $37,700. Cowen’s broader risk scorecard supports that read. On-chain risk sits at 0.188 and Bitcoin risk at 0.311, both far below their readings near the top one year ago.
Yet the valuation reset remains less advanced than the distressed July 2022 phase. BeInCrypto’s models reached the same region one week earlier.
BeInCrypto’s analysis of the final 91-day window projected a bottom between $44,000 and $47,000 by early October. A regression on past drawdowns and a logarithmic Fibonacci retracement converged on that zone.
The log Fibonacci midpoint sits at $44,428, within roughly $700 of Cowen’s figure. Two independent frameworks now point to the same floor and the same quarter.
Institutional forecasts frame a similar range. The wider Bitcoin bottom debate spans Standard Chartered’s $59,000 floor and Galaxy’s $40,000 scenario, and both reject a deeper crash this cycle.
Bitcoin Bottom Watch Is On, But Confirmation Is Far Away
The supply profit and loss cross gives Cowen his trigger. Supply in loss briefly exceeded supply in profit at the summer low, a condition that historically preceded entry into bottoming windows.
The bounce has since lifted supply in profit back to 56.83%. Cowen reads the whipsaw as typical of a bottoming window measured in months rather than a single clean event.
Cowen wrote:
“The framework is in bottom-watch mode, with the low most likely a matter of months rather than weeks away.”
Structural demand has also cooled. ETF holdings peaked above 1.25 million BTC in late 2025 and have since rolled over, with the decline steepening in recent weeks. The marginal bid that absorbed supply on the way up has faded.
Price structure tells the same story. Bitcoin reclaimed its 200-week SMA near $63,100, yet the identical break-and-reclaim sequence appeared in 2022 before the final low arrived.
Confirmation, in his framework, requires two consecutive weekly closes above the 50-week SMA near $86,500. Bitcoin’s current price of about $63,158, down 2.7% in 24 hours, sits roughly 37% below that level.
Cowen also assembles the bull case. Price sits on the first percentile of his long-run quantile model, ETF-era demand could lift the floor, and the absent crowd leaves few forced sellers for a final flush.
For now, the calendar, the on-chain reset, and BeInCrypto’s own models point to the same window. The next test comes quickly, as August will show whether the midterm pattern repeats or finally breaks.
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