Bitcoin [BTC] has struggled over the past few weeks, failing to deliver the anticipated breakout above the $80,000 region and retracing to press-time levels around $78,000.
Sentiment has not shifted dramatically, but structural developments emerging from key on-chain indicators and influential voices within the sector suggest BTC may be positioning itself for a broader move to the upside. Long-term holder behavior is at the center of that case.
LTH supply in loss hits 5.7M BTC
Data tracking long-term holders, the cohort of investors who have held Bitcoin for more than 155 days, is flashing signals that have historically been bullish for the asset.
At the time of writing, long-term holder supply in loss reached 5.7 million Bitcoin, adjusted to 4.93 million. This matches levels last seen in previous cycles that marked price bottoms.
Notably, supply in loss peaked at 5.96 million in 2015, 5.8 million in 2019, and 6.8 million in 2022, with each peak preceding a significant market recovery.
Supply in loss measures how much of the Bitcoin held by long-term holders is currently underwater relative to its acquisition price.
A rally from current levels would be particularly significant, as reports indicate that a move to $84,500 would trigger a new cohort of short-term holders transitioning into long-term holder status, tightening available supply in the process.
Long-term holders absorb losses without selling
Losses of this scale typically create immense pressure on long-term holders to cut their positions. This cycle, however, long-term holders are showing notable resilience.
At press time, the Binary Coin Days Destroyed indicator, which tracks Bitcoin movement among this cohort, was at zero, signaling no significant activity. Long‑term holders are keeping their positions intact despite Bitcoin’s weak performance, refusing to move coins even under heavy unrealized losses.
Demand, however, has yet to catch up. Spot and perpetual market data both confirm an ongoing contraction in Bitcoin demand across these venues, despite the expansion that began in March.
CoinGlass data shows that over the past thirty days, perpetual net inflow stood at just $3.60 billion, while spot net inflow amounts to $872 million, both representing comparably limited capital flow relative to prior periods.
Liquidation clusters sit on both sides
The liquidation heatmap, which identifies clusters of orders on the chart and the direction price is likely to gravitate toward, currently reflects a relative balance between upside and downside.
At press time, liquidity clusters sit both above and below price, and with neither side holding a dominant pull, there is no decisive directional bias.
For now, momentum will drive the direction, shaped by the prevailing trend in the market.
Bulls hold a slight edge at this point, with sell volume declining sharply, dropping 32% to $26 billion in the past day, reducing the immediate downward pressure on the asset.
Final Summary
- BTC’s long‑term holders remain resilient, absorbing losses without selling, signaling potential bottom formation despite weak demand.
- Momentum favors bulls as sell volume drops 32%, easing downward pressure, while liquidity clusters show balanced directional risks.
