The current short-term and long-term bitcoin holder cost bases offer some signals about the market.
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The current short-term holder cost basis has been a key price support to watch over the last couple months as it’s dropped from nearly $53,000 to $49,986. Price below the short-term cost basis is a fairly cautious market sign as recent market buyers are down 15.5% on average. During the summer of 2021, price sustained below the short-term holder cost basis for nearly three months.
At the same time, we’re seeing little movement in the long-term holder realized price with almost no change since November. A rising long-term holder realized price is typically a bullish sign with long-term holders selling older coins with a lower cost basis.
A better way to view this relationship in tandem is using the Short-Term:Long-Term Cost Basis Ratio. We discuss the ratio more in-depth in The Daily Dive #103 – Short-Term Holder Dynamics.
As the short-term holder cost basis has fallen and the long-term holder cost basis has remained fairly neutral, the ratio is showing some signs of a potential uptrend. An upward-sloping ratio is a more bearish market sign.
Below, we highlight when the 14-day change in the ratio is accelerating or decelerating. Dark blue shows when the STH cost basis is increasing relative to the LTH cost basis. Red shows when the LTH cost basis increases relative to the STH cost basis. Historically this has been a quality signal to assess tops and bottoms.
Short-term holders account for 18.23% of outstanding circulating supply, a figure that is near five-year lows, with 93% of said short term holders currently sitting in loss.