The chief investment officer of investment giant Guggenheim has repeated his warning that Bitcoin (BTC) will crash to $20,000.

In an interview with CNBC on April 20, Scott Minerd warned again that Bitcoin could lose half of its value in a pullback.

Familiar Bitcoin bear target resurfaces

“Given the massive move we’ve had in Bitcoin over the short run, things are very frothy, and I think we’re going to have to have a major correction in Bitcoin,” Minerd told the network.

Bitcoin lingered near $55,000 on April 21, having bounced off $52,000 in the latest pullback of its 2021 bull market.

For Minerd, who last claimed in January that BTC/USD would return to $20,000, such an event would form part of a normal market cycle’s ups and downs. His longer-term forecast of $400,000 per Bitcoin still stands, he said.

“I think we could pull back to $20,000 to $30,000 on Bitcoin, which would be a 50% decline, but the interesting thing about Bitcoin is we’ve seen these kinds of declines before,” he continued.

Minerd, who previously garnered controversy over his BTC price remarks, was nevertheless not alone in his bearish near-term prognosis. As Cointelegraph reported, JPMorgan Chase analysts likewise sounded the alarm this week, their concern focused on futures markets.

An entirely average BTC pullback

Reacting, Bitcoin proponents dismissed any idea that deeper losses were inevitable, referencing a combination of factors including strong on-chain indicators.

“Wrong,” Morgan Creek Digital co-founder Anthony Pompliano responded to Minerd.

On Jan. 20, the executive claimed that Bitcoin had put in a price top for the remainder of the year. Since then, BTC/USD has more than doubled.

"In 2017, the average BTC Bull Market correction took 16 days. This most recent pullback has been going on for only 7 days," popular Twitter account Rekt Capital noted about the current price action.

"So while corrections tend to last a few weeks... They are very short in the grander scheme of the overall Bull Market."
BTC/USD corrections during the 2017 bull cycle. Source: Nathaniel Whittemore/Twitter