‘Attack On The Fed’—Bitcoin Bulls Now Predict $1 Million Price

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The Justice Department’s criminal investigation into Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell marks the most aggressive challenge to central bank independence in modern American history. As the unprecedented legal showdown unfolds, prominent Bitcoin advocates are doubling down on their most audacious prediction yet: that the cryptocurrency could reach $1 million by 2026.

The Fed Under Fire

Federal prosecutors served the Federal Reserve with grand jury subpoenas on January 9, threatening criminal indictment over Powell’s congressional testimony about a $2.5 billion headquarters renovation. The probe, led by U.S. Attorney Jeanine Pirro, followed a referral from Rep. Anna Paulina Luna alleging perjury and false statements.

Powell isn’t buying the official explanation. “The threat of criminal charges is a consequence of the Federal Reserve setting interest rates based on our best assessment of what will serve the public, rather than following the preferences of the President,” he said in a statement. “This is about whether the Fed will be able to continue to set interest rates based on evidence and economic conditions—or whether monetary policy will be directed by political pressure or intimidation.”

The Supreme Court will hear oral arguments on January 21 regarding Trump’s firing of Fed Governor Lisa Cook. A ruling in the administration’s favor could set precedent for ousting Powell himself. JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon warned that undermining Fed independence “will have the reverse consequences, it will raise inflation expectations and probably increase rates over time.”

The $1 Million Bitcoin Price Prediction

For Bitcoin maximalists, the Fed crisis validates everything they’ve been saying about the fragility of fiat currency systems.

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MicroStrategy chairman Michael Saylor calls $1 million Bitcoin “inevitable” by 2026. BitMEX co-founder Arthur Hayes predicts $750,000 to $1 million in the same timeframe. JAN3 CEO Samson Mow maintains Bitcoin remains “on track” for the seven-figure milestone.

The mechanism, according to bulls, is straightforward: governments worldwide face unsustainable debt burdens that require continued monetary expansion. Bitcoin, with its hard cap of 21 million coins, becomes the escape valve. Saylor’s corporate treasury strategy has made MicroStrategy a proxy for this thesis.

“Bitcoin will hit $1 million with relative ease,” wrote one prominent analyst on X. “Sovereign debt spiral forces governments into continued monetary expansion. Bitcoin is the only pristine collateral that scales globally without counterparty risk. ETFs unlocked institutional demand. Hard cap supply plus reflexive liquidity regime means price targets become convex, not linear.”

ARK Invest founder Cathie Wood suggested the 2026 midterms could push Trump to act on crypto, potentially including Bitcoin purchases for a U.S. strategic reserve.

The Math Problem

Bitcoin currently trades around $95,000. Reaching $1 million would require roughly a 10x increase, pushing its market capitalization to approximately $20 trillion—larger than gold’s entire market value.

Skeptics argue this requires a global regime shift that hasn’t materialized. “Bitcoin at $1m by 2026 is a massive call. That would mean a $20 trillion market cap,” one analyst noted. “It’s not going to happen. Unrealistic expectations like this one are going to get you rekt.”

Bears point to Bitcoin’s persistent correlation with equities and liquidity constraints as obstacles. Some forecast prices could fall to $50,000-$70,000 in a bear scenario rather than surge tenfold.

Why The Fed Fight Matters

The connection between Powell’s legal troubles and Bitcoin’s price trajectory runs deeper than surface-level correlation.

If political pressure successfully influences Fed policy, it validates the core Bitcoin thesis: that monetary policy in fiat systems inevitably succumbs to political expediency. Central bank independence, a pillar of developed economy monetary policy for nearly 50 years, would be exposed as contingent rather than structural. Central banks have increasingly studied Bitcoin as an alternative reserve asset.

For Bitcoin believers, that’s precisely the point. Whether the Fed maintains its independence or capitulates to political pressure, both outcomes feed the narrative that alternatives to government-controlled money are necessary.

Whether this bitcoin price forecast proves accurate remains to be seen. But the forces bulls have long predicted (politicized monetary policy, sovereign debt spirals, and institutional adoption) just became impossible to ignore.