Bitcoin has temporarily halted its bullish momentum in the market after a remarkable uptrend spanning two weeks. Correcting and consolidating above $60k, BTC retraced by 15.4% from their recent all-time high of $73.7k on March 13, briefly dipping to a local low of $60.8k on March 20 before rebounding back to $70k.
Data from Santiment revealed the third-largest Bitcoin transaction in the past two weeks, totaling 15,411.92 BTC. However, this transaction paled compared to two massive transactions on March 22, amounting to 87,051.03 BTC and 78,317.03 BTC, during a price dip to $63,000. The surge in on-chain transaction volume on that day suggested that significant stakeholders engaging in dip buying contributed to the market’s recovery.
Analyzing the nature of wallets involved in Bitcoin transactions can be challenging, but these recent transactions seemed to align with a broader trend of wallet accumulation observed since the previous weekend.
Another metric drawing attention is the Mean Dollar Invested Age indicator, highlighted in pink. A decreasing trend in this indicator implies that the average age of investments is decreasing as dormant wallets bring older coins back into circulation, a characteristic often seen in cryptocurrency market bull runs.
Bitcoin’s Profit Dynamics & Supply Trends
Glassnode’s report highlighted a striking similarity in price performance between the current cycle and the previous one since the ATH in April 2021, indicating that the market is in a comparable position to December 2020 relative to the 2018-2021 cycle.
Further analysis delves into metrics such as MVRV and the AVIV Ratio, which reached levels one standard deviation above their long-term means. Historically, such levels have been associated with resistance points where investors start to capitalize on profits.
During the recent market fluctuations, around 2.0 million BTC transitioned from ‘in-profit’ to ‘in-loss’ status, suggesting a considerable volume of coins exchanged at a higher cost. However, as the market rebounded to $66,500, approximately 1.0 million coins returned to ‘in-profit’ status. This pattern indicates significant supply clusters formed during pullbacks, accelerating on-chain coin volumes in recent months.
Also, increased profit-taking activities are reflected by the market’s behavior as more than $2.6 billion of realized profit was locked using on-chain spending while BTC reached its ATHs. Importantly, about 40% of the profit-taking activity was from long-term holders cashing out of GBTC Trust with the rest being attributed to short-term traders who took advantage of market momentum.
Additionally, this suggests that there has been an increasing influence of long-term holders during times of sell-side supply pressure. For instance, supply clusters over time and coin age appear similar to previous bull markets in Bitcoin, indicating a wealth transfer event with long-term holders distributing their supplies for profits amidst rising demand.
Nonetheless, recent moves in the market show a subtle interplay between short-term trading actions and long-term investment strategies. Similar patterns have been seen before during other Bitcoin cycles; these point out the evolving dynamics within cryptocurrency markets.
Related Reading | Ethereum Co-Founder Vitalik Proposes Anti-Correlation Penalties To Boost Decentralization