Cathie Wood Just Doubled Down on Her $1 Million Price Forecast for Bitcoin. Is She Right?

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Nearly two years ago, Cathie Wood of Ark Invest famously predicted that Bitcoin (CRYPTO: BTC) would reach a price of $1 million by 2030. That was well before Bitcoin ever broke through the $100,000 price level, and well before the launch of the new spot Bitcoin exchange-traded funds (ETFs) in January 2024. The prediction came when Bitcoin was emerging from the crypto winter of 2022, and its prospects looked uncertain at best.

In a recent interview with Bloomberg, Wood reiterated that Bitcoin is headed to $1 million by 2030. In fact, if everything goes according to plan, she says, it might even reach $1.5 million. Why is Wood so bullish on Bitcoin?

The primary factor driving Bitcoin’s surging price, says Wood, is its inherent scarcity. According to the Bitcoin algorithm, its total lifetime supply is capped at 21 million coins, and 19.8 million coins are already in circulation.

At this point, says Wood, Bitcoin is even more scarce than gold. The supply of Bitcoin is carefully controlled by its algorithm, and there’s no way to crank up its production, as you can with gold.

That limited supply is important because the demand for Bitcoin is rising. Everyone is suddenly racing to own Bitcoin, and that demand will help boost Bitcoin’s price, given its relatively fixed supply.

To come up with her original $1 million price prediction for Bitcoin, Wood deployed a building block model for estimating its future price. According to Ark Invest, several different building blocks are driving Bitcoin demand.

One of these building blocks is demand from institutional investors, who are choosing to allocate more of their portfolios to Bitcoin. Now that the spot Bitcoin ETFs are available to investors, institutional investors have a useful tool for calibrating their precise exposure to Bitcoin. In her original model, she used a base case allocation of 2.5% for Bitcoin. In a best-case scenario, she says, institutional investors might choose to allocate as much as 6.5% of their portfolios to Bitcoin.

Another building block is the growing demand for Bitcoin as a long-term store of value. Until recently, the idea of substituting “digital gold” (i.e., Bitcoin) for physical gold had not really taken off. But now, more investors are buying into the idea of Bitcoin as a hedge against inflation.

Image source: Getty Images.

Another building block is something that Wood refers to as “nation state treasury,” which is demand coming from central banks and sovereign governments. Across the world, nation states are contemplating holding Bitcoin as a reserve asset.

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