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Citigroup Cuts 12-mth BTC, ETH Targets as US Crypto Legislation Stalls

March 17 (Reuters) - Citigroup cut its 12-month forecast for bitcoin and ethereum, citing slow U.S. legislative progress that narrows the window for regulatory catalysts expected to ​boost ETF-driven demand and broader institutional adoption.

Progress on U.S. crypto market-structure legislation ‌has stalled in the Senate, with the Clarity Act's chances of passage declining over disagreements on stablecoin rules and a shrinking window for approval in 2026.

The Wall Street brokerage ​lowered its 12-month bitcoin price forecast to $112,000 from $143,000 and its ethereum ​estimate to $3,175 from $4,304.

"Regulatory catalysts will drive further adoption and flows but ⁠the window of opportunity for U.S. legislation this year is narrowing," Citi ​strategist Alex Saunders said in a note on Monday.

Citi said that under a ​recessionary macro backdrop, bitcoin could drop to $58,000 and ether to $1,198, while its bull case, driven by stronger end-investor demand, puts bitcoin as high as $165,000 and ether at $4,488.

Bitcoin last traded ​around $74,298.11 and ether around $2345.51, as of 0750 GMT on Tuesday.

"ETH will be ​especially sensitive to user activity metrics, which have been weak recently, but stablecoin and tokenization ‌trends ⁠may increase interest and usage," Citi added.

Chances for passing a crypto bill would shrink further if Democrats gain seats in the U.S. Congress in November mid-term elections, since Democratic lawmakers are more divided on overhauling federal rules to ​accommodate cryptocurrencies.

To pass, the ​bill needs support ⁠from at least seven Senate Democrats. Some Democrats are pushing for language that would bar elected officials from profiting ​from crypto ventures, an issue that has gained traction ​amid scrutiny ⁠of the Trump family's World Liberty Financial project. Analysts say that could reduce the likelihood that U.S. President Donald Trump would sign the bill into law.

"Bitcoin is likely ⁠to ​range-trade anticipating legislative news flow with (about) $70,000 an important ​level representing the pre-U.S. election price," Citi said.

Other lawmakers have called for the bill to include ​tighter anti-money laundering rules.

Reporting by Joel Jose in Bengaluru; Editing by Sherry Jacob-Phillips

Source: Reuters


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