Bitcoin's potential to break through its current price ceiling remains one of the most watched scenarios in digital asset markets. This event aggregates three complementary prediction markets tracking whether Bitcoin will achieve an all-time high by three distinct dates throughout 2026: June 30, September 30, and December 31. Together, these markets form a temporal window into market expectations about Bitcoin's trajectory, allowing traders and analysts to compare how confidence shifts across different time horizons. The grouping reveals important patterns: if near-term probabilities are significantly lower than longer-term ones, it suggests markets expect a gradual climb rather than an immediate surge. Conversely, if probabilities converge across timeframes, it indicates growing consensus about timing. When examining these markets, pay attention to the spread between the June and December forecasts—a wide gap often reflects uncertainty about the speed of adoption cycles or macroeconomic catalysts that could accelerate Bitcoin's price discovery. The September date serves as a natural midpoint, helping you gauge whether sentiment is shifting as we move through the year. Price movements in one market frequently influence the others, as traders reassess the probability chain. A notable rally in the June market, for instance, might trigger buying in September and December as traders update their expectations about the momentum required for an all-time high. These linked markets also provide a framework for stress-testing different scenarios: rapid adoption (all three probabilities rise together), delayed catalysts (December strengthens while June remains weak), or reversals (probabilities decline across the board). Understanding the relationships between these timeframes helps distinguish genuine shifts in market fundamentals from temporary volatility.