According to reports, Fundstrat analysts are sending mixed signals about Bitcoin’s path in 2026. One line of work inside the firm sees a noticeable pullback early next year, while another predicts new highs arriving soon after.
Sean Farrell, Fundstrat’s head of digital asset strategy, is reported to have told clients that a “base case” would see Bitcoin move down toward the $60,000–$65,000 range in the first half of 2026.
The same internal material attributes fallbacks for other major tokens — ETH toward about $1.8K–$2K and SOL near $50–$75 — which were framed as potential buying opportunities should markets correct.
Risk Models And Shorter Time Horizons
Farrell’s note, which has circulated as screenshots on social media and among clients, stresses risk management and the possibility of a meaningful drawdown before any sustained rally.
Fundstrat’s head of digital asset strategy, Sean Farrell, says $BTC to $60k as base case, 1H 2026.
Fundstrat’s head, Tom Lee, says $BTC to ATH’s, even up to $200k, by end of Jan 2026.
Is this normal for funds to contradict each other within?
Honest question. pic.twitter.com/KETNygLEtu
— Heisenberg (@Mr_Derivatives) December 20, 2025
The language in those client slides points to cautious positioning and to taking advantage of lower price levels if they arrive.
Tom Lee’s Bullish Outlook Remains Publicly Strong
By contrast, Tom Lee — Fundstrat’s co-founder and a longstanding voice on Bitcoin — has publicly said he expects new all-time highs in early 2026, with some media summaries quoting optimistic ranges as high as $200,000 by late January 2026.
Well stated @ConvexDispatch
https://t.co/8kWrgcl6ml
— Thomas (Tom) Lee (not drummer) FSInsight.com (@fundstrat) December 20, 2025
He has emphasized macro drivers, institutional flows, and cycle dynamics as reasons for continued upside in the coming months.
Different Roles, Different Time Frames
Reports have disclosed that the two views reflect different analytical roles inside the firm: one focused on portfolio-level downside planning and the other on longer-term macro scenarios.
Several clients and observers on X (formerly Twitter) have pushed back on the idea that these are contradictory; instead, they say the notes reflect distinct mandates and time frames.
Market Reaction and What Investors Are Hearing Now
Markets reacted to the story with a mix of skepticism and quick profit-taking. Some traders flagged how fast sentiment can change when internal notes leak, while others said the range of outcomes — from roughly $60,000 to $200,000 — only underlines how uncertain forecasts remain for 2026.
Trading desks are reported to be treating the internal slides as one input among many, not as an official firm forecast.
Public Takeaway
According to the coverage, Fundstrat has not issued a unified, public forecast that collapses the two views into one number.
Instead, clients and the market are being asked to weigh a downside scenario presented by the digital-assets team against a bullish macro scenario voiced by leadership.
Featured image from Unsplash, chart from TradingView





























































