Bitcoin’s Poor Start to Bullish October Continues, but There May Be Cheer Ahead for Bulls
Most gains for bitcoin come in the latter part of the month.

- Bitcoin dipped below $60,000 briefly, leading to $144 million in bullish position liquidations, despite historical data suggesting October as its strongest month with gains averaging 22% since 2013.
- Social sentiment on platforms like X reflects bearish views on Bitcoin's price recovery.
- Rising oil prices due to Middle East tensions shift investor focus towards commodities like oil and gold, impacting risk asset sentiment, including Bitcoin. Polymarket bettors show mixed feelings on Bitcoin's price direction but lean towards a range-bound movement for October.
Bitcoin’s
BTC traded just over $61,300 to remain flat over the past 24 hours despite a volatile U.S. trading session. Ether
The CoinDesk 20 (CD20) index, which measures the largest tokens by market capitalization, was down 1%.
Bitcoin is down over 6% since the start of October, data shows, a month that has only twice ended in the red since 2013 - chalking gains of as high as 60% and an average of 22% to make it the most best for investor returns. That has dented social sentiment on X, with some users being bearish about price recovery.
Polymarket bettors have mixed opinions on where BTC’s price will move in October. While they have ruled out an attempt at $70,000, bettors are more confident that bitcoin will be range bound between $57.5K and $65K.
However, CoinGlass data shows that most gains appear in the latter part of the month, while the first week is generally bearish - meaning current price action still remains in line with historical movements.
The second and third days of October have ended in green just six times since 2013, before recovering in the second week and large movements generally in the third week. Price jumps of as high as 16% generally appear after October 15.

That’s just the data, though. Fundamental and macroeconomic factors ultimately weigh on trading sentiment for risk assets, such as bitcoin – and tensions in the Middle East have shifted investor interest to oil and gold.
Global benchmark Brent oil had its most significant one-day jump in almost a year and is on track for an 8% weekly gain since early 2023.
Looking at macroeconomics for a moment, markets were shook earlier this month by geopolitical tension in the middle east. Bettors on Polymarket are giving a 63% chance that Israel will strike Iranian oil facilities in October, but only a 35% chance that they will hit Iran’s nuclear facilities.
The U.S. presidential election is looking as close as ever on Polymarket, with the two candidates either briefly tying the race or fighting over a 1 percentage point lead.
Donald Trump-themed TREMP, a Solana meme coin named after the Republican candidate, is up 14%, while the original MAGA Trump token is flat, according to CoinGecko data. The Kamala Harris-themed KAMA token is down 7.5%.
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Bitcoin will be 'top performer' in 2026 after getting crushed this year, says VanEck

VanEck's David Schassler expects gold and bitcoin to rebound sharply as investor demand for hard assets is expected to rise.
What to know:
- Bitcoin has underperformed compared to gold and the Nasdaq 100 this year, but a VanEck manager predicts a strong comeback in 2026.
- David Schassler, the firm's head of multi-asset solutions, expects gold's surge to continue to $5,000 next year as fiscal "debasement" accelerates.
- Bitcoin will likely follow gold’s breakout, driven by returning liquidity and long-term demand for scarce assets.









