Economist Timothy Peterson has shared his year-end prediction for Bitcoin price with his followers.
In a recent analysis, economist Timothy Peterson suggested that Bitcoin’s difficulty adjustment rate indicates a potential increase in the BTC price to $100,000 by the end of the year.
Bitcoin’s difficulty, a measure of how difficult it is to mine a new block on the blockchain, is adjusted every two weeks to ensure that blocks are added approximately every 10 minutes. This metric increases with more miners and computing power and decreases when miners leave. Bitcoin’s decentralized nature and automatic, transparent difficulty adjustments prevent any entity from manipulating it.
According to Peterson, Bitcoin’s difficulty is closely related to its price. As difficulty increases, the energy cost per Bitcoin mined also increases, pushing miners to balance electricity and hardware costs against potential rewards. High Bitcoin prices make these costs reasonable and keep mining profitable even as difficulty rises. Conversely, a price drop can force some miners out, reducing computing power and difficulty.
Peterson argues that there is a feedback loop between Bitcoin price and difficulty. Higher prices attract more miners, increasing difficulty, which can support higher prices. Conversely, higher difficulty and associated costs drive miners to improve efficiency, and as the network strengthens, it supports higher prices. The market strives for an equilibrium where energy costs are balanced with Bitcoin’s price.
Considering these dynamics and current trends, Peterson projects a reasonable year-end range for Bitcoin price of $60,000 to $90,000. The high difficulty level indicates a robust network security supporting higher prices, while energy costs also provide a floor price. However, according to the economist, the potential for increased adoption and positive market sentiment could push the price even higher, towards $100,000.