CryptoCurrency
“Smartest Man” YoungHoon Kim Makes Fresh Bitcoin Prediction
Bitcoin’s rebound above $94,000 on January 5 reignited bold price predictions across Crypto Twitter, including a fresh call from YoungHoon Kim, who claimed Bitcoin would hit $100,000 within 48 hours.
The comment quickly gained traction, partly due to timing and partly because of Kim’s controversial reputation for extreme Bitcoin forecasts.
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Self-Proclaimed Smartest Man Alive Keeps Getting Bitcoin Prediction Wrong?
Kim, a South Korean online personality, rose to popularity in late 2025 after repeatedly describing himself as having an IQ of 276 and positioning his market views as superior to traditional analysis.
His Bitcoin predictions often go viral, even as many traders view them with skepticism.
In November, Kim predicted Bitcoin would surge to $220,000 within 45 days, a forecast that failed to materialize.
In December, he also claimed Bitcoin would break $100,000 within a week.
Instead, Bitcoin spent most of December trading below $90,000, weighed down by macro uncertainty, year-end positioning, and fading momentum.
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That context matters. Kim’s earlier calls came during periods when Bitcoin lacked clear catalysts and broader risk sentiment remained fragile. The market simply did not support the kind of parabolic move his timelines required.
This week’s setup looks different, but not dramatically so.
Are Bitcoin Charts Turning Bullish Again?
Bitcoin’s move back to $94,000 followed a risk-on open in US stock markets. Wall Street investors interpreted the weekend’s Venezuela escalation as contained and unlikely to disrupt global markets.
Stocks moved higher, energy names outperformed, and crypto followed equities rather than acting as a safe haven.
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Still, the jump does not automatically justify a $100,000 breakout within 48 hours. Bitcoin remains sensitive to equity sentiment.
While momentum has improved, there is no clear sign of panic buying, supply shock, or structural catalyst that typically drives rapid six-figure moves.
Also, on-chain data weakens the case for an imminent vertical breakout.
While long-term holder (LTH) spending spiked in late November, a large share of that activity came from exchange internal transfers—particularly Coinbase. They were not a genuine distribution into the market.
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While long-term holders moved a large amount of Bitcoin in late November, much of that activity came from internal exchange transfers, especially from Coinbase, rather than real selling into the market.
Once those internal movements are excluded, long-term holder behavior looks active but not extreme. This suggests repositioning rather than the kind of demand surge needed for a sharp breakout.
Derivatives funding remains stable. Exchange inflows are muted. Volatility has risen, but not explosively. In other words, the rally looks controlled rather than euphoric.
Kim’s latest prediction aligns with market optimism—but his timeline remains aggressive. Bitcoin could test psychological resistance near $100,000 in the coming weeks if risk appetite holds.
A near-term breakout, however, would likely require a stronger catalyst than improved sentiment alone.
For now, the call sits somewhere between confidence and wishful thinking. Bitcoin is moving again, but the market is still trading structure, not slogans.
