Despite a comparably muted October, bitcoin’s steady performance near $110,000 and signs of Fed easing have analysts calling for a breakout.
By Helene Braun|Edited by Stephen Alpher
Oct 15, 2025, 8:29 p.m.

- Bitcoin continued under pressure even as gold and silver yet again surged to record highs.
- Still, the price holding in the $111,000 area can be considered a sign of resilience amid geopolitical and economic uncertainty.
- Analysts from Lekker Capital and 21Shares say bitcoin could soon rally.
Bitcoin BTC$111,320.92 is lagging its usual October pace but at least some analysts say its steadiness near the $111,000 mark signals strength, not weakness.
The price action today will be familiar to frustrated bitcoin bulls, with gold and silver surging yet again to new record highs and U.S. stocks in the green. Bitcoin, though, remained under pressure, slipping 1.2% over the past 24 hours to $111,500. Losses were somewhat steeper across the rest of the crypto sector, with ether and XRP dipping 3% and solana and dogecoin dropping roughly 2%.
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Speaking at the Digital Asset Summit in London on Wednesday, Quinn Thompson, chief investment officer at Lekker Capital, said bitcoin’s time is coming.
“I posit that we will catch up to gold,” he told attendees. “It will start very soon and the move that is about to come in bitcoin and crypto broadly will resemble a November 2024 and an October 2023 type of move.”
Matt Mena, a crypto research analyst at 21Shares, voiced a similar outlook, saying bitcoin’s durability through global uncertainty is “underscoring how structural demand—anchored by ETF inflows and a more dovish policy outlook—continues to provide a floor.” With leverage flushed out and monetary easing approaching, Mena projects bitcoin could climb to $150,000 before year-end.
Much depends on the Federal Reserve and expectations that the U.S. central bank will continue easing monetary policy. In its Beige Book released Wednesday, a summary of economic conditions across the Fed’s 12 regional banks, the central bank reported signs of growing weakness in the labor market, suggesting market anticipation of rate cuts at both of its remaining policy meetings this year remains on track.
Fed Chair Jerome Powell avoided specifics on rates during remarks Tuesday but alo acknowledged “softness” in the labor market, reinforcing market’s belief that further policy easing is on the table.
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- Open interest reaches record high despite derivatives market share decline: Total open interest surged 3.2% to $204 billion and peaked at an all-time high of $230 billion during the month.
- Altcoins on CME outperform as Bitcoin and Ether futures decline: While CME’s total derivatives volume stayed flat at $287 billion (-0.08%), SOL futures jumped 57.1% to $13.5 billion and XRP futures rose 7.19% to $7.84 billion. BTC and ETH futures fell 4.05% and 17.9% respectively.
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Coinbase launched The Blue Carpet, then added BNB to its roadmap — an intent signal, not a guarantee — pending market-making support and technical readiness.
What to know:
- Coinbase introduced “The Blue Carpet,” a consolidated listings experience with direct access to its listings team, asset-page customization, referral discounts and select Coinbase One seats.
- Thirty-three minutes later, Coinbase added BNB to its listing roadmap; roadmap inclusion is not a guarantee and trading will start only after liquidity and technical criteria are met, with a separate launch notice.
- The signal is notable because bnb anchors the BNB Chain tied to Binance, Coinbase’s fiercest rival; listing remains free and does not require issuers to buy ancillary services.