It’s May 2026, and there’s a topic that keeps popping up in many people’s minds in the crypto market: that old Benner cycle chart. You know, when you hear that a forecasting tool with more than 150 years behind it is going viral among retail investors, it’s hard not to be curious.



Samuel Benner was a farmer and took a heavy blow during the 1873 crisis. After that, he began studying patterns in the prices of agricultural commodities and published his findings in a book in 1875. His idea was simple: solar cycles affect harvests, harvests affect prices, and that’s it—you get a predictable pattern. He broke everything into three lines: panic, boom, and recession. He mapped it all the way out to 2059.

What’s most interesting is that this Benner cycle really did nail several historical events. The Great Depression of 1929, the dot-com companies bubble, and even the collapse of COVID-19. Investors like Panos pointed out that 2023 was ideal for buying and that 2026 would mark the next big peak. A lot of people in the crypto market embraced this narrative. When you’re dealing with an uncertain economic situation, a chart that promises clarity is tempting, right?

But here’s the problem: we’re in 2026 now, and reality isn’t exactly lining up with what the Benner cycle predicted. Yes, there was volatility. In April 2025, when Trump announced controversial tariffs, markets tanked—the crypto market cap fell from 2.64 trillion to 2.32 trillion in just a few days. JPMorgan raised the recession probability to 60%, and Goldman Sachs to 45%. This was supposed to be the perfect setup for the Benner cycle to work.

But do you know what Peter Brandt said at the time? He harshly criticized those old charts, saying they’re more distraction than a useful tool. And he has a valid point. In the end, the market is chaotic—driven by news, sentiment, and politics—not by 150-year historical patterns.

Even so, some investors keep believing. Crynet argued that the Benner cycle doesn’t work because it’s “magic,” but because so many people believe it does—and that creates momentum. It’s a self-fulfilling prophecy, basically.

The truth? The Benner cycle has turned into more of a narrative instrument than a real prediction. Google Trends data shows that interest surged when the economy got tense. Retail investors look for stories that make sense, especially when everything feels chaotic. But if you want to make money, it’s probably not going to be from charts that are a century and a half old.
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