Trading near the short-term holder cost basis represents a critical phase for Bitcoin’s cycle. When the asset falls below this level after reaching new highs, it typically drives the percentage of supply in profit down to roughly .
That means more than 15% of all Bitcoin now sits at a loss, signaling that weaker hands may soon capitulate. This is the third instance in the current cycle where Bitcoin has dropped below this threshold.
If it fails to reclaim the $113.1K level soon, the next key support lies around $108.6K, where 15% of supply is held at a loss, and further weakness could drag prices toward $97.5K.
Such a move would deepen losses for newer investors and further test market resilience.
Long-term holder behavior supports this cautious view. Since July 2025, their daily spending volume has more than doubled, from around 10,000 BTC to over 22,000 BTC per day.
This consistent selling pressure from experienced investors suggests they are securing profits while the broader market shows signs of fatigue.
The options market mirrors the same defense mentality. Open interest has hit new records as derivatives are increasingly deployed as a means of hedging exposure, rather than selling spot positions.
Implied volatility soared to 48, from the 40-odd level of some two weeks ago, evidence of an obvious shift towards the more reactive mode.
Keep demand elevated, and the price of trading the downside safety net higher premiums. The 1-month volatility risk premium went negative, bringing an end to the quiet market regime that had made the short-vol trades pay.
Even with the recent 6% run, from $107.5K to $113.9K, little interest was expressed by the market for calls, where, wherever, increasing purchases continued.
Also Read: Bitcoin Faces Economic Headwinds: Is the Recent Above $111,000 Rally Sustainable?