According to reports, Michael Saylor told viewers that most equity analysts expect Bitcoin to top $150,000 by Christmas.
From a current price of $113,050, that would require an increase of about 35%. There are roughly three months left until December 25. The figures set a clear benchmark for what traders now call the year-end race.
Analysts Back A $150,000 Target
Saylor tied the call to wider adoption. He said during a CNBC interview more firms adding Bitcoin to their balance sheets and more people learning about the asset will lift demand.
Because Bitcoin’s supply is fixed, that demand pressure, he argued, could push prices higher. The tone was confident, and the math was simple: move from $113k to $150,000, an over 30% gain, and the target is met.
Tom Lee Puts A Higher Number On The Table
Tom Lee, Head of Research at Fundstrat Global, raised the stakes with a $200,000 projection for Christmas 2025. He linked the outlook to macro policy, pointing to the September 17 FOMC meeting as a potential trigger if interest rates are cut.
Lee also suggested that gains in small-cap crypto tokens could lift Ethereum, because ETH has often tracked broader risk appetite. A move to $200,000 from $113 would be much larger — roughly a 70% increase — and would likely need strong macro support.
At the same time, seasonal patterns matter: Bitcoin often sees strong performance in the fourth quarter. Those two factors together are why some analysts are comfortable with bold targets.
But timing is tight. Three months is a short window for large moves, and unexpected events could derail the path.
Odds, Research Firms And Other Voices
Other voices have weighed in. Canary CEO Steven McClurg put the odds of reaching $150,000 this year at 50%. Large banks like Standard Chartered have even flagged $200,000 as a possible level for 2025.
These projections show a clustering of bullish views, though they span different timeframes and rely on different assumptions.
Market Reaction And Caveats
Bitcoin was up about 1% in the past 24 hours. Price moves of 30% to 70% in short stretches have happened before in crypto, but they are not commonplace and they bring big risks.
Traders and investors will have to weigh those forecasts against market data, policy signals from the US Federal Reserve, and daily price action.
The quarter ahead looks busy, and outcomes will depend on more than one forecast coming true.
Featured image from Meta, chart from TradingView