TAO Rockets 70% — Here’s What Fueled Bittensor Move And The Near‑Term Outlook

Bittensor (TAO) has emerged as one of the market’s strongest performers this month, rallying roughly 73% over the past 30 days even as larger cryptocurrencies staged a more modest recovery. 

NVIDIA Nod Fuels TAO Rally

Market analyst Alex Carchidi argues that a key catalyst was public recognition from a major tech figure. NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang recently acknowledged decentralized AI training — the core use case Bittensor champions — as a practical approach after hearing about the project’s latest technical milestone. 

The analyst asserted that the endorsement amplified investor interest in the Bittensor blockchain by validating the concept that training large language models (LLMs) can be accomplished outside centralized data centers.

Bittensor’s most recent achievement centers on its Templar subnet, which reportedly trained Covenant‑72B, a 72‑billion‑parameter LLM, through a decentralized collaboration involving more than 70 contributors using commercially available hardware. 

That accomplishment is noteworthy because large‑scale model training normally requires substantial capital and tightly controlled infrastructure; proving such a model can be trained in a distributed manner lends credibility to Bittensor’s thesis that subnets can marshal meaningful compute to build economically valuable services.

Bittensor At Risk If Subnets Don’t Scale

Carchidi also points to TAO’s tokenomics as a potential upside factor. The chain’s supply dynamics partially resemble Bitcoin’s (BTC), a design Cardichi finds appealing for long‑term appreciation if the network continues to produce in‑demand services. 

Still, he cautions that the project faces a critical shortcoming: so far, its subnets have not demonstrated robust, sustainable demand that translates into meaningful external revenue.

The current economics underline that concern. The protocol’s distribution of newly minted TAO results in the top subnet receiving roughly $52 million in annualized subsidies from the chain, while that subnet brings in at most about $2.4 million in outside revenue. 

Across the entire Bittensor network, demand‑side revenue ranges from approximately $3 million to $15 million a year, set against a token market capitalization near $3.3 billion. 

Cardichi concluded that those figures create what he deems as “a valuation mismatch” that could put TAO’s price at risk if the subnets fail to scale revenue significantly.

Key Price Levels To Watch

Technical levels add another layer to the outlook. TAO was trading around $308 at the time of writing, with immediate resistance positioned near $315 after failing to consolidate above it during last week’s rally. 

Analyst Ali Martinez had previously outlined a key conditional scenario for the Bittensor token. Should the support level of $315 hold, the rally could extend towards $580. This makes the $315 level one of the most important to reclaim right now. 

However, last week’s inability to breach mid‑term resistance at $378 contributed to the pullback to $308, leaving TAO almost 60% below its all‑time high of $757.

Bittensor

Featured image from OpenArt, chart from TradingView.com 

editorial staff