JPMorgan analysts turned cautious on digital assets, saying the second half of 2026 depends on how Strategy funds its bitcoin purchases and whether the CLARITY Act passes Congress.
JPMorgan analysts led by Nikolaos Panigirtzoglou said the crypto market's second-half outlook rests on two factors: Strategy's ability to cover $1.7 billion in annual dividend payments without selling more bitcoin and the passage of the CLARITY Act, which they now see with less than 50% odds this year.
"A rebuilding of the company's dollar reserves might be needed to restore confidence and reduce investor concerns that the company would sell more bitcoins to cover dividend payments," Panigirtzoglou, managing director at JPMorgan, said in a June 7 report.
Strategy holds 843,706 bitcoin at an average cost of $75,699, representing a paper loss of about $11.5 billion at current prices near $62,000. The company's dollar reserves cover roughly 6.3 months of dividend payments, the analysts said, after Strategy established a $1.44 billion reserve in December. The firm's recent sale of 32 bitcoin — its first since 2022 — "spooked" markets even though it was voluntary and symbolic, according to the report.
If Strategy maintains its year-to-date acquisition pace, it would imply roughly $32 billion in bitcoin purchases in 2026, up from about $22 billion in each of the prior two years. But without clarity on dividend funding, the analysts said a positive second half remains conditional. On the regulatory front, the CLARITY Act faces political headwinds ahead of US midterm elections, with the stablecoin yield debate and other legislative hurdles narrowing its window for passage.
$22 Billion in YTD Inflows, Half the 2025 Pace
JPMorgan estimates total digital asset inflows at roughly $22 billion year-to-date, implying an annualized pace of about $52 billion — half the level seen in 2025. The estimate includes crypto fund flows, CME futures positioning, venture capital fundraising and corporate treasury purchases, including Strategy's bitcoin acquisitions.
The analysts noted that bitcoin has spent most of 2026 trading below their estimated production cost, which fell from $90,000 at the start of the year to $77,000 as hashrate and mining difficulty declined, before rebounding to roughly $87,000. Historically, bitcoin's production cost has acted as a "soft floor" for price, they said.
Weak Sentiment as a Contrarian Signal
Despite turning cautious, the analysts said the current weak sentiment in crypto markets could prove a "bullish contrarian signal going forward." Bitcoin recently broke below $60,000 amid more than $1.7 billion in spot ETF outflows during the week — the largest weekly figure in over a year — and over $1 billion in 24-hour liquidations across the market.
The analysts had been "overweight" and "positive" on digital assets for 2026 as recently as February, expecting a further rise in institutional-led crypto flows supported by additional regulations including the Clarity Act. The rebound in institutional flows they projected has yet to materialize.
Michael Saylor, Strategy's co-founder and executive chairman, hinted at continued accumulation over the weekend, posting on X: "A good time to add more dots."
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.