Bitcoin’s price has experienced mounting sell-side pressure, causing it to shed more than 5.5% over the last seven days and setting a six-week low at $58,400 on June 25. During this sell-off, BTC dropped below its short-term cost basis, risking a deeper correction, according to market intelligence firm Glassnode.
“Since mid-June, the spot price has plunged below the cost basis of both the 1w-1m holders($68.5k) and 1m-3m holders ($66.4k),” Glassnode wrote in its “Week On-chain” newsletter published on June 25.
“If this structure persists, it has historically resulted in a deterioration of investor confidence, and risks this correction being deeper and taking longer to recover from.”Bitcoin short-term holder (STH) cost basis — or realized price — is a metric that represents the average acquisition price of BTC for investors who are considered short-term holders, typically defined by the movement of coins that have been held for less than 155 days. Data from LookIntoBitcoin reveals that BTC’s breach of the $64,000 level on June 23 saw it fall below the STH realized price at the time, which was $64,591. In addition, the latest drawdown was inches away from pulling the price below the cost basis of the 3m–6m holders at $57,300, which remains on the rise, even as the price falls. The report also highlights that the cost basis of the 1w-1m holders has plunged below the 1m–3m cost basis, signaling “a diminishing momentum in the demand side, and a net capital outflow from the asset.”
“During previous bull markets, a negative capital flow structure has occurred up to five times. We can also see that this structure has been in play since May and into early June.”