Bitcoin

BTC may need to dip to $19.3K to cool Bitcoin profit-taking — new data

Bitcoin (BTC) would need to return below $20,000 to reset a key metric that covers speculative profit-taking, data shows.

In the latest edition of its weekly newsletter, “The Week On-Chain,” analytics firm Glassnode revealed that short-term holders (STHs) might be dictating BTC price resistance.

Profit-taking reinforces resistance levels

As BTC/USD climbed toward $25,000, STHs — those holding coins for 155 days or less — began seeing substanti.

This was captured by the market value to realized value (MVRV) metric, which compares the Bitcoin market cap to the value of coins moved on-chain.

“By comparing these two metrics, MVRV can be used to get a sense of when the price is above or below ‘fair value’ and to assess market profitability,” Glassnode explains in an accompanying guide.

MVRV passed 1.2 on the way to multimonth highs, coinciding with $23,800 appearing as an area of BTC price resistance.

As Glassnode writes, “the possibility of STHs taking profits tends to grow during periods where the average STH is 20%+ in money, returning a STH-MVRV above 1.2.”

“The recent rejection at the $23.8k level resonates with this structure, as the STH-MVRV hit a value of 1.2 before stalling,” it continued this week.

“Should the market return to $19.3k, it would bring STH-MVRV back to the value of 1.0, and indicate that spot prices have returned to the cost basis of this cohort of new buyers.”

$19,300 would thus form something of a magnetic target in terms of profitability and incentive not to sell for STHs.

As Cointelegraph reported, Glassnode is not alone in suggesting that $20,000 may not hold as support for BTC/USD, and a new local low could form beneath that line in the sand.

Bitcoin in “transitional phase”

Also in Glassnode’s crosshairs, meanwhile, is the long-term holder (LTH) cost basis and the activities of whales invested in Bitcoin since the end of its last bear market in late 2018.

Related: BTC price ‘in the chop zone’ — 5 things to know in Bitcoin this week

The realized price of the so-called “old” supply — the price at which it last moved on aggregate — currently sits at $23,500, further reinforcing the area as a key battleground.

On the downside, Bitcoin’s combined realized price is $19,800, again feeding into the idea that this zone could ultimately form support.

“The Bitcoin economy often reacts not only to levels widely observed in traditional technical analysis but also the psychological cost basis levels of various investor cohorts printed on-chain. This takes place not only with respect to their realized price but also regarding the degree of profit and loss held within their supply,” Glassnode concluded.

“From this lens, the market currently resides in a transitional phase, bounded above by the Realized Price of Older Supply and also by the average Whale that has been active since the 2018 cycle bottom.”

BTC/USD traded at $22,400 at the time of writing on March 7, according to data from Cointelegraph Markets Pro and TradingView.

The views, thoughts and opinions expressed here are the authors’ alone and do not necessarily reflect or represent the views and opinions of Cointelegraph.

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