Short-Term Holders Under Pressure As Bitcoin Slips Below Key Realized Price Levels

BTC-1,89%

CryptoQuant’s latest chart work has set off fresh debate about whether Bitcoin is merely “resetting” after a short squeeze or slipping into something deeper. The firm’s Realized Price, UTXO Age Bands visualization, which maps the average cost basis of holder cohorts by how long they’ve held coins, shows that spot has dropped beneath the short-term realized bands (1 week–1 month and 1–3 months). That means a large swath of recently acquired coins is underwater and selling from those holders is the dominant driver of the pullback.

Traders watching the chart see that relief rallies keep stalling near these short-term cost bases, where break-even exits and clustered stop-losses create a ready supply. The market psychology is simple: when price approaches where short-term holders paid, sellers who are just trying to get square or who were forced out by stops can cap upside, making every bounce feel limited.

At the same time, the longer-dated realized bands, the 6-month and older cohorts, have not been convincingly breached, which is the key nuance in the data. That suggests, in CryptoQuant’s terms, the episode looks more like a reset or “mini-bear” phase rather than outright capitulation of the broader holder base.

Is Bitcoin Entering a Mini-Bear Phase?

The price action on Wednesday underscored that tension. Bitcoin was trading in the high-$60,000s, roughly $67,500, after a recent bounce failed to reclaim the short-term realized levels. Market data aggregators show the same range, and trading volumes remain thin enough that modest flows can move price decisively in either direction.

The macro and market plumbing backdrop isn’t helping. Institutional cracks surfaced last week when Reuters reported a temporary suspension of withdrawals at a Chicago-based liquidity provider, a reminder that operational stress and margin pressure can amplify on-chain selling into the spot market. Meanwhile, crypto-focused outlets and crypto exchanges are noting the same story. Overhead supply and muted demand are keeping rallies in check and promoting range-bound trading between roughly $60,000 and the low $70,000s until one side decisively wins.

For now, the on-chain view leaves a clear checklist for traders and analysts. A sustained recovery needs price to reclaim the short-term realized bands so that the underwater cohort can move back toward break-even, reducing forced selling on rallies. If that fails and price begins to accept meaningfully below the 6-month realized bands, the argument shifts toward broader structural weakness.

Until then, the preservation of longer-term holders’ cost bases offers a degree of protection against a full-scale capitulation, even as the short-term picture remains fraught and volatile. Market participants will be watching both the on-chain age bands and liquidity signals closely to judge whether this is a painful reset or an opening act of something deeper.

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