
In the quiet of summer, a wave of capital from Wall Street and the behind-the-scenes stable-coin strategies of major U.S. banks may be silently pushing Bitcoin toward a new record. The question on everyone’s mind: Could Bitcoin set a fresh all-time high as soon as this July?
As July unfolds, the global crypto investment community is closely watching every move Bitcoin makes. After a period of sideways trading, the key question is whether Bitcoin now has the strength to break through its historical peak and establish a new price milestone during these summer months.
While typical factors such as market sentiment and sector-specific events still attract attention, some of the strongest forces driving Bitcoin’s rise appear to be coming from unexpected sources: giant investment funds on Wall Street and banking titans like JPMorgan.
Bitcoin, once a niche asset available only on specialized crypto exchanges, has become significantly easier to access. Since the start of the year, the introduction of spot Bitcoin ETFs has opened a new gateway for investors. These financial products enable everyone—from trillion-dollar pension funds to everyday retail investors—to buy Bitcoin easily and securely on the stock market, just like purchasing shares of Apple or Google. The launch of these ETFs has sparked a wave of enthusiasm. Data shows continuous inflows into these funds, with a recent streak of 15 consecutive days of net buying. This demonstrates that major institutions, managing vast pools of assets, have strong confidence in Bitcoin’s potential and are actively accumulating it.
Markus Thielen, head of research at 10x Research, describes this institutional demand as one part of a “perfect storm” that could push Bitcoin to $116,000 as early as this month. The other elements of this storm include an unprecedented tightening of supply and growing expectations of looser U.S. monetary policy. The amount of Bitcoin available for trading on exchanges has fallen to record lows. As supply becomes scarce and demand surges—thanks in large part to ETF buying—prices are under upward pressure. At the same time, speculation is growing that the U.S. Federal Reserve may ease monetary policy in the months ahead. This would inject additional liquidity into the economy, making traditional currency cheaper and boosting the appeal of scarce, store-of-value assets like Bitcoin.
These combined forces—strong institutional inflows and a shrinking supply—are creating an exceptionally solid platform for Bitcoin’s price in the short term.
Beyond these immediate drivers, an ambitious plan by America’s largest banks may shape Bitcoin’s trajectory over the longer term. Arthur Hayes, one of the crypto sector’s most influential figures, has outlined a scenario in which the U.S. government seeks new ways to finance its enormous national debt, with major banks like JPMorgan playing a key role. In this scenario, banks would issue their own stablecoins—digital tokens pegged 1:1 to the U.S. dollar—and shift a portion of their massive customer deposits into these digital dollars. To back these coins, the banks would purchase U.S. government bonds, creating a perfect cycle in which the government gains a reliable buyer for its debt and banks earn safe returns.
This quiet injection of liquidity into the system could drive investors to seek out reliable stores of value, with Bitcoin standing out thanks to its fixed 21 million coin supply. The result would be sustained, long-term demand for Bitcoin—not just a short-term price boost, but a structural growth driver for years to come.
Despite these bullish signals, investors should maintain a realistic perspective. While the upside potential is significant, the path to a new peak is unlikely to be a straight line. Historically, the July-to-September period tends to see lower trading volumes and a more subdued market. On-chain data from analytics firm CryptoQuant shows that the average unrealized profit among long-term Bitcoin holders stands at around 220 percent—an impressive figure, but still below the 300 to 350 percent levels seen during previous cycle tops in March and December 2024. This suggests the market remains in a bullish phase but has not yet reached the kind of euphoria that typically accompanies major peaks. Analysts believe Bitcoin may need to approach the $140,000 mark to trigger that kind of sentiment.
For now, Bitcoin trades near $107,000, just 4 percent below its all-time high. However, the decline of the Bull Score index to a neutral reading of 50 indicates that upward momentum may be pausing in the short term. While the market could take a breather over the summer, the signals from Wall Street and America’s banking giants are clear: Bitcoin is gaining deeper acceptance and becoming more integrated into the global financial system.
For investors, this is a critical moment to stay vigilant. The most significant moves may be unfolding quietly behind the apparent calm of summer.
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Source: Vietnam Insider
