Bitcoin climbs above $118,000 as investors pin hopes on ‘Uptober’ bounce

October 1, 2025

Bitcoin (BTC-USD) climbed more than 4.5% on Wednesday to top $118,000 in afternoon trade as a US government shutdown injected uncertainty into financial markets. Investors also saw seasonal tailwinds for crypto markets lifting bitcoin out of a recent slump.

October has historically been bitcoin’s strongest month, rising in 10 of the past 12 years, according to Compass Point Research, leading many in crypto markets to refer to the month as “Uptober.” Seasonality also favors the fourth quarter, with the token gaining in four of the past five Q4 periods.

That performance often follows September weakness, but this year bitcoin closed out the month 4% higher, therefore “raising the bar for October gains,” Compass Point analyst Ed Engel wrote on Tuesday.

Volatility in recent weeks briefly pushed bitcoin toward $108,000 before markets bounced back. Engel argued that “false downside breakouts often provide a bullish setup, particularly ahead of a seasonally strong October.”

Read more about today’s market action

Wall Street analysts also see catalysts outside the calendar that could contribute to a strong October setup.

For now, the Treasury General Account — equivalent to the government’s checking account — is largely topped up, easing concerns that liquidity would be drained from assets such as crypto and redirected into bonds. Meanwhile, stablecoin activity since the passage of landmark legislation in July has added another layer of support to crypto.

“I believe that the next wave of crypto adoption will come from stablecoin adoption. And that’s going to be very positive for crypto overall,” Samir Kerbage, senior investment officer at Hashdex, told Yahoo Finance this week. “This is a trend that might take 6 months to one year to start to reflect on prices.”

The supply of stablecoin issuer Circle’s (CRCL) USDC token has increased 19% quarter over quarter to $73.6 billion, a sharp acceleration from just 2% growth in the second quarter, Seaport Research Partners analyst Jeff Cantwell noted.

Read more: How stablecoins work

“Bottom line, the expansion in USDC in circulation looks very strong in Q3 — and it also comes at an opportune time ahead of Q4, which historically has been a strong period for crypto,” Cantwell wrote in a client note on Tuesday.

Cantwell noted that Circle’s stablecoin demand is spread across various blockchains, or digital ledgers, with 62% on ethereum (ETH-USD), 14% on Solana (SOL-USD), and 8% on Hyperliquid (HYPE).

A bounce in the fourth quarter could also clear the way for crypto bulls’ lofty targets.

In August, Bernstein analysts said they see bitcoin reaching its cycle peak between $150,000 and $200,000 in the next six to 12 months, during what the firm called a “long, exhausting bull run” for crypto into 2027.

The team at Fundstrat sees the price of ether moving to $10,000 by year-end or as high as $15,000 in a bull case scenario. Fundstrat co-founder and CIO Tom Lee is the executive chair of BitMine Immersion Technologies (BMNR), the market’s largest ethereum treasury company. BitMine owns over $11 billion worth of ether.

AUGUST8: In this photo illustration, a smartphone displays the logo of Circle Internet Group Inc. (NYSE:CRCL), a major fintech firm and issuer of the USDC stablecoin, in front of a screen showing the company's latest stock market chart on August8, 2025 in Chongqing, China. (Photo illustration by Cheng Xin/Getty Images)
In this photo illustration, a smartphone displays the logo of Circle Internet Group Inc. (Cheng Xin/Getty Images) · Cheng Xin via Getty Images

Ines Ferre is a senior business reporter for Yahoo Finance. Follow her on X at @ines_ferre.

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