Bitcoin’s critical stress zone, defined by on‑chain thresholds
Bitcoin is stalling inside a band framed by two on‑chain reference levels where stress typically concentrates: the Short‑Term Holder Cost Basis and the True Market Mean. Based on data from Glassnode, price has failed to reclaim the Short‑Term Holder Cost Basis near ~$96,500, while the True Market Mean sits closer to ~$80,700, marking a range where weaker hands historically capitulate and stronger hands test accumulation.
The same report flagged that a very high share of supply had recently been in profit (around 97%), a condition that has often preceded periods of fragility rather than durable bottoms. Trading below the short‑term cost basis implies many recent buyers are at an unrealized loss, which can amplify sell pressure if volatility rises.
Why this zone matters now for price stability and risk
Loss of the upper threshold typically signals softer near‑term support, while proximity to the lower band raises the probability of forced de‑risking. SignalPlus has highlighted a dense support and stop‑loss area around ~$72,000–$75,000, noting that if this pocket gives way, mechanical selling could intensify; “catastrophic stops” could follow, said Augustine Fan, Head of Insights at SignalPlus.
Options positioning is also defensive in tone. The analysis points to elevated downside hedging and a more negative put/call skew, consistent with participants insuring against further drawdowns rather than positioning for a swift rebound.
A broader macro lens remains cautious as well. As reported by Mike McGlone, Senior Macro Strategist at Bloomberg Intelligence, Bitcoin is only about 13% below its 50‑week moving average, whereas major cyclical lows in prior markets tended to occur after much deeper deviations, suggesting the bottom may not yet be confirmed.
At the time of this writing, Bitcoin trades near $67,946, based on data from Nasdaq. That level sits well below the cited short‑term cost basis and closer to longer‑term fair‑value anchors, which underscores why this band is drawing outsized attention.
Key on‑chain metrics: Short‑Term Holder Cost Basis, True Market Mean
Short‑Term Holder Cost Basis is commonly used to approximate the average on‑chain acquisition price of recent buyers; when spot trades below it, these cohorts in aggregate face unrealized losses, often increasing sensitivity to drawdowns. When price reclaims and holds above this line, stress on recent entrants typically eases and trend stability can improve.
True Market Mean serves as a longer‑horizon “fair value” anchor derived from realized‑value methodologies. Approaches that combine these two references help frame a practical stress corridor: persistent rejection below the short‑term cost basis with drift toward the mean has, in past cycles, aligned with weaker liquidity, stop‑loss clustering, and higher volatility risk.
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