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The Biggest Loss Day in Bitcoin History
Last week, if you still held BTC, you probably experienced this feeling:
Open the app.
An unusually long red candlestick.
Chat groups are silent.
And the only thought in your mind is:
“Maybe I should sell to lighten the load…”
According to data from Glassnode, February 5, 2026, recorded a realized loss of $3.2 billion in a single day – the largest in Bitcoin’s history.
The number sounds huge.
But let me explain it in the simplest way.
⸻
Usually, people look at the “Realized Loss” indicator to see how much the market is losing.
But that indicator has a problem:
It includes internal coin transfers – for example:
• Exchanges transferring coins between their wallets
• A fund moving assets between addresses within the same organization
These are not “panic selling.”
So sometimes, the number looks very large, but it may not accurately reflect market sentiment.
The Entity-Adjusted Realized Loss, on the other hand, is different.
It filters out those internal transactions.
Only counts when coins are actually transferred between independent parties.
To put it more plainly:
It only counts when someone truly presses the “SELL” button.
And on February 5, 2026, the total amount lost when people pressed the sell button reached $3.2 billion.
What does that tell us?
Many people just couldn’t take it anymore.
⸻
Capitulation – sounds fancy, but it’s just that.
In reality:
“Enough, I’m too tired. Let’s sell and get it over with.”
That’s when:
• Leveraged traders are forced to sell
• High-cost buyers can’t hold on anymore
• Loss of confidence causes people to exit the game
The market is like a crowded room.
When everyone rushes to exit at the same time,
the door has to be opened wide.
Last week was definitely one of those times.
⸻
But honestly, here’s what I think.
A market can’t bottom out when everyone still has hope.
It usually hits bottom when most people are exhausted.
A $3.2 billion loss in a single day isn’t something to celebrate.
It’s really painful.
But it also shows:
Many “weak hands” have left.
The panic supply has been released.
The question now isn’t:
“Is this the bottom?”
It’s:
After a day like that,
how many more people can panic-sell?
The market doesn’t die from fear.
It just resets the players.
Those who stay after days like this
are usually the ones who truly understand what they’re doing.
And if you’re still reading this,
you probably aren’t a FOMO newcomer anymore.
This content isn’t for everyone,
so I only share more deeply with those who genuinely want to learn seriously.