
Bitcoin is currently priced about 27% lower than its peak of $125,000, but 67% of its supply is still in profit above the crucial 50% mark, indicating only light bearish sentiment thus far.
Summary
- Bitcoin has experienced a correction of approximately 27-35% from its October record high of around $125,000, yet two-thirds of the supply remains profitable compared to its acquisition cost.
- The supply-in-profit metric, monitored by Adler AM, continues to exceed the 50% “capitulation” line, reflecting conditions similar to early 2022 corrections rather than a complete market downturn or severe bear market.
- Short-term moving averages and a recovering drawdown imply a potential local base is forming; however, if profitable supply dips below 50%, the risk of a deeper decline could increase swiftly.
Bitcoin has fallen 27% from its peak of $125,000 to about $90,000, with 67% of its supply remaining in profit, based on market analysis from Adler AM.
This metric, which assesses the percentage of Bitcoin (BTC) supply trading above its purchase price, stays above the crucial 50% level. During the market lows in 2023, this indicator dropped to 46%, according to the analysis. Current figures reflect conditions similar to those seen early in the prolonged correction phase of 2022.
Market experts indicate that as long as this metric holds above 50%, the market dynamics appear moderately bearish. A drop below this threshold could signal increased risk and heighten correction pressures, as per the report.
Bitcoin decline from all-time high
Bitcoin peaked at $125,000 in early October before entering a correction phase marked by a maximum drawdown of 35%. This drawdown has since improved to 27.6%, with the one-week simple moving average starting to climb, according to the analysis.
The current profit level of 67% is below the 90%-plus figures commonly observed at market highs, but remains substantially above the sub-50% capitulation area, as reported. The decrease in drawdown from the 35% peak indicates a recovering trend and hints at the potential formation of a short-term base.
Price trends have shown some stabilization following a correction in November, with short-term moving averages starting to rise. The supply-in-profit metric’s status above the 50% line shows the market is navigating between selling pressure and efforts to create a sustainable local bottom, according to the analysis.
Bitcoin trading data was sourced from market analytics firm Adler AM.
