VanEck Sees Bitcoin Hitting $2.9M by 2050 on Trade, Reserve Use

VanEck Sees Bitcoin Hitting $2.9M by 2050 on Trade, Reserve Use

> At a Glance

> – VanEck projects Bitcoin could reach $2.9 million by 2050 under base-case assumptions

> – Model assumes 5-10% of global trade settled in BTC and 2.5% of central-bank reserves

> – Bear case delivers 2% CAGR to $130k; bull case reaches $53.4 million

> – Why it matters: Long-range forecast frames BTC as strategic monetary asset, not speculative bet

VanEck’s 25-year capital-market outlook turns heads with a seven-figure Bitcoin price tag, hinging on the cryptocurrency’s role in trade finance and sovereign reserves rather than short-term price cycles.

2050 Projections

VanEck Head of Digital Assets Research Matthew Sigel pegs Bitcoin’s base-case compound annual growth rate at 15% between 2026 and 2050, lifting each coin to roughly $2.9 million from an $88,000 baseline set for December 31, 2025. The valuation model treats BTC as a non-sovereign monetary asset, ignoring equity-style metrics such as discounted cash flow or price-to-earnings ratios.

The forecast rests on two addressable markets:

  • 5-10% share of global trade settlement
  • 2.5% weight on central-bank balance sheets
Scenario CAGR 2050 Price
Bear 2% $130,000
Base 15% $2.9 million
Bull 29% $53.4 million

In the bull case, Bitcoin captures 20% of international trade and 10% of domestic GDP, eclipsing gold’s reserve dominance.

Near-Term Realities

vaneck

While the asset manager zooms out, Matrixport warns 2026 looks more tactical than cyclical. Matrixport notes declining volumes, weakening capital inflows, and a break below Bitcoin’s one-year moving average point to a selective, challenging environment. On-chain data show large holders distributing coins as new-address growth and realized-cap inflows stay muted.

Key Takeaways

  • VanEck’s base case values each Bitcoin at $2.9 million by 2050
  • Structural adoption-trade settlement plus central-bank reserves-drives the model
  • Bear-case stall yields $130,000, while bull-case dominance reaches $53.4 million
  • Near-term headwinds contrast with long-range optimism

Investors weighing the next trade must reconcile VanEck’s decades-long monetary thesis against today’s fragile market structure.

Author

  • My name is Olivia M. Hartwell, and I cover the world of politics and government here in Los Angeles.

    Olivia M. Hartwell covers housing, development, and neighborhood change for News of Los Angeles, focusing on who benefits from growth and who gets pushed out. A UCLA graduate, she’s known for data-driven investigations that follow money, zoning, and accountability across LA communities.

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