Could Chainlink (LINK) Triple In 5 Years? Why A $20B Market Cap Is Possible

Chainlink (LINK) has spent much of the past year in a holding pattern, lingering around the 18th largest cryptocurrency by market capitalization and pulling back roughly 43% year-to-date. 

Still, zooming out on LINK’s longer-term picture, the oracle’s native token remains far from its peak. LINK is roughly 82% below its all-time high of $52, trading at about $9.509 at the time of writing.

Despite the weak price action, Leo Sun of The Motley Fool has published a report arguing that LINK could still see substantial upside over the next five years. 

How LINK’s Circulation Could Drive Big Gains

The core of Sun’s outlook is that the token’s trajectory may benefit from changes in both supply dynamics and real-world adoption—especially as Chainlink’s ecosystem continues to expand.

Sun points to token circulation as a key part of the long-term picture. When LINK last reached its record level in 2021, it had a circulating supply of about 410 million tokens. Since then, the circulating figure has risen to approximately 727 million as of the time of the report. 

Sun argues that this growth in circulation could bring LINK much closer to its supply limit within the next five years. If demand continues to rise while the supply of newly available tokens tightens, the token price would have room to move significantly—particularly if new demand arrives faster than supply expansion.

Another major element of Sun’s thesis is Chainlink’s growing role in regulated finance and payments infrastructure. Over the past year, Chainlink has partnered with roughly two dozen major financial institutions, including organizations such as UBS, Euroclear, and the SWIFT network. 

The purpose of these relationships, according to Sun, is to help accelerate money transfers, automate transaction workflows, and support the tokenization of real-world assets. 

If Chainlink becomes a core piece of infrastructure for tokenized finance, the report suggests LINK’s value could rise further as the ecosystem’s usage expands.

What Needs To Change For Chainlink?

At the heart of the argument is the way LINK is positioned in the crypto market. Sun notes that LINK can’t be valued using a “scarcity model” in the same way Bitcoin (BTC) is often approached, since the mechanics of token distribution and market structure differ. 

Instead, Chainlink is described more as a developer-driven asset—closer to how investors think about Ethereum (ETH) rather than a pure scarcity narrative. 

In that framework, LINK’s long-term prospects depend less on fixed scarcity alone and more on continued relevance to developers, integration into real financial systems, and the degree to which market interest returns.

Finally, the report ties the $20 billion market cap idea to broader macro conditions. If the overall cryptocurrency market improves over the next five years—as Sun suggests could happen when the macro environment becomes more favorable—Chainlink’s market cap could move up materially.

Chainlink

Featured image created with OpenArt, chart from TradingView.com 

editorial staff