Bitcoin ( BTC ) sellers are now “minimal” despite prices hovering within 15% of all-time highs.

Data from onchain analytics platform CryptoQuant shows that sell-side risk is at its lowest since the start of 2024.


Bitcoin sell-side risk hits “minimum zone”

Bitcoin may have seen episodes of knee-jerk sell-offs during bouts of BTC price volatility in recent months, but overall, hardly anyone appears “willing” to capitulate.

Analyzing the sell-side risk ratio metric, CryptoQuant contributor Axel Adler Jr. revealed that would-be seller numbers have collapsed since March’s all-time high on BTC/USD.

“Since the $73K peak, the number of people willing to sell Bitcoin has dropped to a minimum zone over the past 6 months,” he commented in a post on X on Sept. 25.

Bitcoin sell-side risk ratio. Source: Axel Adler Jr./X

Sell-side risk ratio sums all onchain realized profits and losses per day and divides that by Bitcoin’s realized cap. The result is a quantified picture of potential selling pressure, and currently, its values are below 20,000. By comparison, during the March high, the metric measured nearly 80,000.

An accompanying chart uploaded by Adler describes thus sell-side risk as “minimal.”

Bitcoin realized profit and loss (USD). Source: Axel Adler Jr./X

Continuing, a further X post nonetheless showed healthy network activity when measured in US dollar terms.

Onchain realized profit and loss figures show a net daily tally of around $500 million — albeit still a faction of March’s $3.6 billion record.

“If you think the network is dead, you're mistaken,” Adler summarized.

“On average, Bitcoin generates around $571M in profits each day, compared to $115M in losses. The net average profit investors are making is measured at $456,000,000 per day.”

BTC price support clinches a comeback

As Cointelegraph continues to report , the aggregate cost basis of various Bitcoin investor cohorts plays a key role in defining BTC price support and resistance.

Related: Bitcoin transactions dive 30% in 6 months amid BTC price ‘disinterest’

Bitcoin speculators, or short-term holders (STHs), are currently “in the black” after experiencing an extended period of uncertainty — and distributing their holdings to the market, often at a loss, as a result.

The STH cost basis currently sits at around $62,250, per data from statistics resource BGeometrics.

Bitcoin STH realized price. Source: BGeometrics

Earlier this week, X account The Bitcoin Researcher offered further details on the current composition of STH entities’ BTC exposure, describing the market as being in a “pivotal state.”

Source: The Bitcoin Researcher

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