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This onchain metric has identified the Bitcoin bottom every cycle

Convergence between bitcoin supply in profit and supply in loss has repeatedly coincided with major market lows.

Feb 4, 2026, 12:05 p.m.
BTC: Profit vs Loss Supply (Glassnode)
BTC: Profit vs Loss Supply (Glassnode)

What to know:

  • Bitcoin currently has 11.1 million BTC in profit and 8.9 million BTC in loss, with historical bottoms forming when these two measures converge.
  • If convergence occurred at current cost basis levels, it would imply a spot price near $60,000, similar to bottom signals seen in 2015, 2019, 2020, and 2022.

Bottom-fishing is sexy but brutal. But if that's your game, this battle-tested on-chain indicator may be your North Star for spotting the bitcoin bear market bottom.

This metric, called BTC supply in profit versus loss, gauges how bitcoin wallets sitting on paper profits stack up against those underwater. When the two balance out, bear markets tend to bottom, past data show. This makes it a reliable signal for capitulation and long-term opportunity.

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To the relief of bulls, that scenario could arrive soon, as the number of those sitting on profits and losses seems to be converging.

Glassnode data shows that currently 11.1 million bitcoin is in profit, meaning these coins have been acquired at prices lower than the going market rate. Meanwhile, 8.9 million BTC is in loss.

A potential convergence could mark a bottom just as it did in 2022 and 2018-19, as seen in the chart below.

BTC: Profit vs Loss SUpply (Glassnode)
BTC: Profit vs Loss SUpply (Glassnode)

The Glassnode chart illustrates the volume of BTC supply held in profit, shown in blue, and in loss, shown in red, relative to the circulating supply.

As spot prices move above or below aggregate cost bases, coins migrate between these two supply cohorts, providing insight into market wide positioning and investor stress.

Historically, convergence points between the two have marked definitive cycle bottoms. This occurred in November 2022 around $15,000 following the FTX collapse, in March 2020 when bitcoin briefly fell below $3,000 during the covid-19 market shock, in January 2019 near $3,300, and again in 2015 just above $200.

Let's see if history repeats itself.