NewsBTC - 2/4/2025 11:01:12 PM - GMT (+0 )
The recent price slump in Bitcoin, caused by a turbulent cryptocurrency market, has sent many investors into panic mode, forcing them to offload their BTC holdings at a loss.
However, blockchain analytics firm Glassnode noted that a group of Bitcoin investors remained resilient despite the crypto market volatility, saying that long-term holders of the firstborn crypto are unshaken by the current market slump.
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Long-Term Holders ‘Largely Unaffected’Glassnode said that Bitcoin, like other cryptocurrencies, experienced a shaky week in which traders saw the world’s most dominant digital asset crash below the $100,000 level.
At one point, Bitcoin’s price nearly hit the $90,000 level, at $92,800, on February 3, which was the lowest since BTC recorded $90,890 on January 13.
On the brighter side, the blockchain analytics firm noted that BTC’s long-term holders seem insulated from all the chaos surrounding the cryptocurrency community, saying, “#BTC’s long-term holders (LTHs) remain largely unaffected.”
Glassnode revealed that data showed nearly 0.01% of the supply of these BTC holders was in loss, emphasizing the resiliency of long-term investors in times of market turbulence. However, the crypto firm remarked that these Bitcoin investors experienced a decreasing unrealized profit.
Bitcoin is currently trading at $99,093. Chart: TradingView“However, their unrealized profit share has steadily declined since November, now at its lowest since September – suggesting no renewed accumulation yet,” Glassnode said in a post.
The analyst noted that BTC holders are not aggressively buying at current prices, possibly waiting for better market signals before resuming accumulation.
Bitcoin Short-Term Holders BleedMeanwhile, data showed that another segment of Bitcoin investors suffered the most from the market crash – short-term holders.
According to Glassnode, short-term BTC holders experienced a significant loss after the crypto’s price slid below the $100,000 level, causing panic among these traders.
#Bitcoin dipped below $100K over the weekend, pushing a notable amount of short-term holder (STH) supply into loss. At $97K, the supply in loss & profit held by STHs was evenly split at ~11% – the largest loss exposure for STHs since early January: https://t.co/Drjy6ahQMm pic.twitter.com/gypNiJ0BqX
— glassnode (@glassnode) February 3, 2025
Glassnode said that when Bitcoin plummeted to $100,000 over the weekend, it pushed “a notable amount of short-term holder (STH) supply into loss.”
“At $97K, the supply in loss & profit held by STHs was evenly split at ~11% – the largest loss exposure for STHs since early January,” the blockchain analytics firm said in an X post.
Bearish Market SentimentAn analyst noted that Bitcoin briefly dipped so low that it nearly hit $90,000 per coin, as the dominating crypto suffered after the market crash.
“Bitcoin plummeted to as low as $91.2K as all of crypto has dipped with world stock markets starting the week with heavy bleeding. Media outlets seem to be attributing plummeting sectors to ‘Trump’s trade war’,” market intelligence platform Santiment said in a post.
😰 Bitcoin plummeted to as low as $91.2K as all of crypto has dipped with world stock markets starting the week with heavy bleeding. Media outlets seem to be attributing plummeting sectors to ‘Trump’s trade war’.
Whether this is the primary reason or if there are other… pic.twitter.com/ij1bQ6xfUu
— Santiment (@santimentfeed) February 3, 2025
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Santiment added that there have been overwhelmingly negative reactions from investors in the cryptocurrency community as a result of the price decline, and for a moment it seems BTC is about to enter bearish territory.
The market intelligence platform noted that at the moment, Bitcoin was able to pull back to $96,000.
“Was this flush orchestrated to get trigger-happy retail traders to sell at a local bottom? Historically, markets virtually always move the opposite direction of the crowd’s expectations,” Santiment asked in a post.
Featured image from Pexels, chart from TradingView
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