Citi cut its Bitcoin target by $31,000 even as BTC prices rise, with Washington policy delays seen as a key reason the broader crypto breakout remains on hold.Citi cut its Bitcoin target by $31,000 even as BTC prices rise, with Washington policy delays seen as a key reason the broader crypto breakout remains on hold.

Citi Slashes Bitcoin Target by $31,000 as Washington Delays Stall Crypto Breakout

2026/03/18 07:09
4 min read
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Citi slashes Bitcoin target by $31,000 despite rising prices as Washington delays stall crypto breakout

Bitcoin’s market tone remains split. On one side, institutional money is still coming into U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs and the long-term bullish case has not disappeared. On the other, the available public reporting on Citi’s latest crypto call shows a more cautious near-term stance than the headline suggests. A Reuters report republished by Investing.com said Citi slightly trimmed its 2025 year-end Bitcoin target to $133,000 while keeping its 12-month target at $181,000.

That matters because Bitcoin was still trading around $74,290 on March 17, 2026, according to the research provided for this draft, even as sentiment stayed fragile. The latest Crypto Fear & Greed Index reading available during research was 28, or Fear, suggesting traders have not fully embraced a clean breakout narrative despite resilient prices and fresh ETF inflows.

Why Citi’s Bitcoin target still caught attention

The most important distinction is that public reporting supports a modest trim, not a confirmed issuer-documented $31,000 cut. Reuters, via Investing.com, described the change as a slight reduction and linked it to shifting investor flows and macro crosscurrents, including a stronger dollar and weaker gold prices, rather than directly to Washington policy delays. The note still included a relatively high 12-month Bitcoin target, and Citi analysts said the “digital gold” narrative remains intact.

That leaves traders with a familiar contradiction: spot prices have held up much better than broader sentiment, but large institutions are still signaling that upside may be less straightforward than pure momentum traders want to believe. The gap between a $74,000 spot market and a six-figure institutional target is still wide, yet the fact that Citi trimmed rather than raised its near-term view is enough to cool some of the more aggressive breakout expectations.

Washington delays are a sentiment drag, but not a proven trigger for Citi’s move

The broader Washington story is real, even if it should not be overstated. The research for this article points to House crypto legislation stalling during the July 2025 “crypto week,” reinforcing the idea that U.S. legislative delays can interrupt bullish regulatory narratives. That dynamic fits with a market that keeps waiting for cleaner policy signals before fully repricing crypto higher.

Still, the evidence available for this article does not show that Washington delays were the direct reason Citi adjusted its Bitcoin target. That distinction matters. It is fair to say policy friction has capped enthusiasm across digital assets, especially when traders are already watching broader macro pressure. It is not yet supported to say congressional delays directly caused Citi’s forecast change.

For readers tracking the policy side, that makes related regulatory coverage more useful as context than as a one-line explanation. Coinlive readers following SEC and CFTC Joint Guidance on Crypto Assets: What the Headline Signals and CFTC Clarifies Rules for Non-Custodial Crypto Wallet Providers will recognize the pattern: the market responds quickly to regulatory headlines, but durable upside usually needs clearer follow-through from lawmakers and agencies.

What Bitcoin traders should watch now

For now, the cleaner read is that Bitcoin is still benefiting from institutional demand even while sentiment stays cautious. Research cited for this piece showed U.S. spot Bitcoin ETF net inflows of $199.4 million on March 16, 2026, after another strong positive day on March 13. That flow picture does not look like a market that has lost sponsorship.

What it does look like is a market waiting for confirmation. Traders are balancing firm ETF demand, a still-bullish long-term institutional target, and a fear-heavy sentiment backdrop against unresolved macro and policy risks. That is why a full crypto breakout remains harder to confirm than isolated strength in Bitcoin itself.

The practical takeaway is straightforward: watch whether ETF inflows stay positive, whether risk appetite improves beyond Bitcoin, and whether Washington delivers anything more concrete than delay. Until then, Citi’s revised call is less a bearish reversal than a reminder that crypto can rise without yet escaping the forces that keep broader conviction in check. Readers looking at the macro side of that setup may also want to compare it with Moody’s Recession Odds Hit Point of No Return as Bitcoin Eyes True Market Value in 2026, where macro expectations and crypto valuation are similarly colliding.

Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.

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