Bitcoin’s latest price decline has brought a new theory back into focus. Capriole Investments founder Charles Edwards says Bitcoin now trades with a 28% quantum discount.
Edwards argues that the market is pricing in fear over slow post-quantum security planning. His model compares Bitcoin’s market price with a projected valuation path toward $120,000.
Bitcoin recently traded near $62,099 after a sharp market selloff. The move placed BTC below the model’s discount line and showed a wider gap between spot price and Edwards’ estimate of fair value.
He said the main issue is developer inertia around quantum-resistant upgrades. His view is that Bitcoin Core has not moved fast enough toward post-quantum signature planning.
Quantum computing could threaten Bitcoin if future machines break the elliptic curve cryptography that protects wallets. Current systems remain secure against normal computers, but quantum systems may change that over time.
As crypto.news previously reported, Citi warned Bitcoin faces an outsized quantum threat. Citi estimated that 6.5 million to 6.9 million BTC may already have exposed public keys on-chain.
Separately, as previously reported, Quantus said quantum timelines may be moving faster than earlier expected. The report said lost wallets may become a hard problem because owners cannot move coins to safer addresses.
Stanford cryptographer Dan Boneh offered a more careful view, as crypto.news reported. He said, “Don’t panic, but don’t ignore,” while warning that a rushed migration could create its own technical risks.
Edwards said the probability of a major quantum break, often called Q-Day, may begin rising after 2027. He also said the risk could rise sharply by 2030 if Bitcoin lacks a clear upgrade plan.
His argument is not that Bitcoin is already broken. Instead, he says markets may discount BTC because investors see no official post-quantum migration roadmap.
The model’s discount factor suggests that Bitcoin may struggle to reach new highs without clearer developer action. Edwards said a formal upgrade plan within 12 months could help close the valuation gap.
That claim remains one market model, not a confirmed price rule. Bitcoin still moves on many forces, including liquidity, ETF flows, macro stress and leverage.
Edwards also pointed to Bitcoin treasury firms as another pressure point. He cited the risk of debt-heavy strategies linked to corporate BTC buying.
The concern centers on firms that use capital markets to acquire Bitcoin at scale. Strategy remains the largest and most watched example because of its long-running Bitcoin treasury plan.
As crypto.news recently reported, Bitcoin was already under pressure from Iran-linked market stress and ETF outflows. The same report noted that Strategy sold 32 BTC for about $2.5 million, its first sale in nearly four years.
Bitcoin’s next move may depend on whether buyers defend the $60,000 region. If BTC stabilizes, the quantum debate may become a longer-term valuation issue. If selling continues, traders may watch whether technical pressure and security concerns feed the same bearish narrative.

