
What to know : Bitcoin still trades about 21 percent above its realized price, indicating most holders remain in profit and that on-chain data do not yet signal a classic long-term accumulation zone. The gap between spot and realized price has compressed rapidly from roughly a 120 percent premium in late 2024 to 21 percent now, suggesting a fast-moving compression phase rather than a completed market reset. On-chain indicators show no capitulation event or broad institutional surge in demand, implying that a deeper drawdown toward the realized price near $54,000 may be needed to mirror past cycle bottoms.
Bitcoin at $67,500 is being sold as a buying opportunity. The on-chain data says it's not one yet — but it's getting closer to becoming one.
CryptoQuant data shows bitcoin's realized price, the average cost basis of all coins on the network weighted by their last transaction, sitting at $54,286. Spot trades at $68,774 on the same chart. That puts the gap at roughly $14,500, or about 21% above realized.
In the 2022 bear market, the signal that marked the actual bottom was spot falling below realized price. Bitcoin traded under its aggregate cost basis from June through October 2022, and the deepest point of that dip, when spot was roughly 15% below realized, coincided almost exactly with the cycle low near $15,500.
The early 2020 COVID crash produced a similar breach. Both were genuine accumulation zones because the entire network was underwater on average. Buying when the market is collectively at a loss has historically been one of the most reliable entry signals in bitcoin's history.
The current setup is not that. A 21% premium to realized price means the average holder is still sitting on a profit. That is a meaningful buffer. For spot to reach realized price from here, bitcoin would need to fall to approximately $54,000, another 20% decline from current levels.
What is notable is how fast the gap has been closing. In late 2024, when bitcoin was trading above $119,000, the premium to realized price was roughly 120%. That has compressed to 21% in about 15 months, one of the fastest approaches to the realized price line outside of outright crashes.
CryptoQuant analyst Oinonen flagged Monday that bitcoin has entered what they describe as an "accumulation zone," drawing a comparison to the 2022 bottom. But the framing is premature.
The 2022 accumulation zone, as visible on CryptoQuant's own chart, was defined by spot trading at or below realized price. The box they draw around current price action captures a range where spot remains well above the metric that's supposed to define the zone.
Other on-chain signals reinforce the incomplete-reset read. The Coinbase Premium Index has returned to negative territory, indicating weakening institutional demand on the venue most associated with U.S. buyer flows.
None of this means bitcoin can't rally from here. The $65,000-$70,000 range has held through five weeks of war escalations, and ETF inflows of over $1 billion in March suggest a buyer base that isn't waiting for on-chain models to give the all-clear.
But that test hasn't happened, and the on-chain evidence suggests the market hasn't yet experienced the kind of pain that historically marks the bottom.
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