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Recently looked at on-chain data for Bitcoin prices and found an interesting phenomenon. Bitcoin's current trading price is around $71,800, but its realized price (the average cost basis of all coins) is only $54,286, meaning the current price is about 32% above the average cost basis. This premium sounds pretty good, but the problem is that this gap is narrowing rapidly.
It reminded me of the bottom marker of the 2022 bear market—that was when Bitcoin's price fell below the realized price, and the entire network was in a loss state. That was truly the accumulation zone. And now, although Bitcoin's price has pulled back, we're still far from that "full network loss" condition. According to this logic, Bitcoin might need to continue adjusting down to around $54,000 to truly match the buying opportunity in history.
Interestingly, this premium has compressed from a rapid 120% at the end of 2024 to the current 32%, at an astonishing speed. This indicates the market is undergoing a quick adjustment phase but hasn't completed a true reset yet. I also see that some major exchanges' fund flow indicators are weakening, with no obvious surge in institutional demand.
But that doesn't mean Bitcoin can't rebound from here. In recent weeks, the $71,000 range has held up relatively well, and in March, over $1 billion in ETF funds flowed in. However, based on on-chain data, the market hasn't experienced that kind of real "shakeout pain," so the truly safe buy signals might still require waiting a bit longer.