Bitcoin To $175k, ETH To $17k Then Dot-Com Style Crash: Expert

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In an interview with Dutch host Paul Buitink published on September 4, Henrik Zeberg, Head Economist at SwissBlock, set out a two-stage roadmap for Bitcoin and crypto: a final, powerful โ€œmelt-upโ€ driven by liquidity and momentum, followed by a dot-com-style bust that he says will be catalyzed by a surging dollar and tightening financial conditions.

โ€œWe do have the largest bubble ever,โ€ Zeberg said, arguing that equities, crypto and real estate will first climb further before the cycle turns. โ€œThe music is still playing and you can still get a drink at the bar,โ€ he quipped, extending his Titanic metaphor to explain why he believes sentiment and macro signals have not yet turned decisively negative.

Bitcoin, Ethereum To Soar Before Dot-Com Style Crash

Zeberg locates the current moment late in the business cycle but not at the point of breakdown. He points to the absenceโ€”so farโ€”of classic pre-recession triggers in yields, credit spreads and initial jobless claims. โ€œA crash doesnโ€™t come out of thin air,โ€ he said. โ€œWe simply donโ€™t see those signals just yet.โ€ With global liquidity improving at the margin and the Federal Reserve already โ€œpivotingโ€ in tone, he expects a sharp upside phase reminiscent of Japanโ€™s 1989 finale: a rising angle that steepens into a near-vertical blow-off. At the index level, he pegs the S&P 500โ€™s terminal run at roughly 7,500 to 8,200 from around 6,400 today.

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Crypto, in his view, will amplify the move. Zeberg expects Bitcoin to lurch first to โ€œat leastโ€ $140,000, then top somewhere in the $165,000 to $175,000 range before the bust begins. He projects Ethereum near $17,000 on the assumption that the ETH/BTC ratio can stretch to about 0.12 in a late-cycle altcoin phase. He stressed the path would be abrupt rather than leisurely: โ€œWhen things are moving in crypto and into the final phase of a bubble, it can be very, very fast.โ€

The fulcrum of his thesis is the US dollar. Zeberg is watching closely for a DXY bottom and then a surge to 117โ€“120โ€”โ€œthe wrecking ballโ€ that, in his telling, would hammer risk assets as global dollar demand spikes. โ€œIf weโ€™re going to see somewhat of a crisis, all this debt will need to be settled in dollars,โ€ he said, calling the greenback โ€œstill the cleanest shirt,โ€ even if it is โ€œgetting quite nasty.โ€ In that scenario, liquidity preference overwhelms risk appetite, credit tightens and deleveraging beginsโ€”especially outside the US, where dollar liabilities collide with local-currency cash flows.

He argues that monetary easing cannot ultimately forestall a cyclical turn once the real economy rolls over. Rate cuts may initially goose marketsโ€”โ€œYouโ€™re going to see it running up really fastโ€โ€”but then โ€œthe more wise people in the marketโ€ will infer weakness rather than salvation. He thinks the Fed will start with 25 basis points this month, while leaving open the possibility of a larger shock move.

Either way, he sees a relatively short deflationary bustโ€”โ€œsix to nine monthsโ€ in one formulationโ€”followed by policy panic and, on the other side, a stagflationary phase in which โ€œthe tools of the Fed will become impotent.โ€ He was caustic about the professionโ€™s inflation priors, skewering what he called the โ€œhubrisโ€ of micromanaging CPI to exactly 2% and ridiculing the decision to award Ben Bernanke a Nobel Prize for what he described as โ€œreinventing money printing,โ€ calling it โ€œthe most stupidest thing Iโ€™ve ever seen.โ€

Zebergโ€™s commodity framework slots into that sequence. He expects gold to do its โ€œfinest dutyโ€ during a liquidity crunchโ€”get sold to raise cashโ€”before it reprises 2008โ€™s pattern with a steep drawdown, then a powerful recovery. He cited the 2008 analog of a roughly 33โ€“35% peak-to-trough decline in gold and as much as 60% in silver before the policy response set a new leg higher.

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Secularly, however, he projects gold โ€œinto the 2030sโ€ at as much as $35,000 per ounce as negative real rates, balance-sheet expansion and an eventual โ€œmonetary resetโ€ reprice money. That reset, in his vision, would anchor a new settlement system on gold and ledger-based railsโ€”โ€œa digital element to it,โ€ but โ€œnot Bitcoin.โ€

Strategy: The Largest Ponzi In The Market?

On single-name risk, Zeberg delivered one of the interviewโ€™s most incendiary lines about Strategy (formerly MicroStrategy), the largest corporate holder of Bitcoin. โ€œI think we have the largest open Ponzi game when it comes to MicroStrategy,โ€ he said. โ€œEverybody needs to pile into the stock, then he can take on some more debt and he buys more Bitcoin.โ€

He tied the firmโ€™s vulnerability to his macro template: if DXY heads to 120 and โ€œthe largest bubble in the world, the Nasdaq,โ€ suffers an 85%-type drawdown, โ€œBitcoin is going to have a really, really bad periodโ€”and then that means MicroStrategy is going to have that.โ€

He called the structure โ€œthe largest house of cards we have seen in a long timeโ€ and warned that an unwind would be โ€œreally, really bad for people who think they can just hold on to it.โ€ The characterization was his alone; he did not present evidence beyond his cyclical and balance-sheet logic, and his remarks were framed within his broader melt-up-then-bust scenario.

Beyond headline tokens, Zeberg argued that โ€œ99%โ€ of crypto projects will ultimately fail, with only a handful emerging like the Amazons that survived the dot-com washout. He distinguished between speculative coins and blockchain projects that deliver real-world utility, while cautioning that โ€œthis rampant speculationโ€ has been prolonged by an era of easy money.

As for timing catalysts, Zeberg downplayed the idea of a single trigger and instead described an environment that โ€œbecomes toxicโ€ as high rates, falling real income and climbing delinquencies pressure banks and corporates. He is monitoring front-end yieldsโ€”which he says have begun to โ€œbreak some levelsโ€โ€”credit spreads, and the dollarโ€™s turn.

He also noted that large-cap techโ€™s earnings concentration has โ€œdistortedโ€ the market and that even quality small-cap tech is likely to be dragged lower in an indiscriminate unwind. The first stage, however, remains higher. โ€œItโ€™s a self-propelling cycle,โ€ he said of the melt-up, powered by FOMO and the belief that โ€œthe Fed has got our back.โ€

At press time, BTC traded at $111,528.

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BTC remains above crucial support, 1-day chart | Source: BTCUSDT on TradingView.com

Featured image created with DALL.E, chart from TradingView.com

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