Bitcoin’s been bleeding, but the story under the hood is clearer than the noise. A huge chunk of coins now sit below their owners’ cost basis. That’s not just a mood check. It changes how price behaves, who sells, and where support might actually form.
We just crossed a line that usually shows up late in cycles. Losses are wide. Long-term holders still own most of the supply. The question is whether that cohort is the only real backstop left.
Let’s pull the on-chain threads, keep it practical, and talk through what’s next without pretending anyone has a crystal ball.
PointDetails Record supply in loss Glassnode-based reporting logged ~10.83M BTC at unrealized loss on June 25, 2026, the highest on record (ChainReport citing Glassnode). Loss overtook profit this cycle On June 4, coins in loss (~10.5M) exceeded coins in profit (~9.8M) as BTC neared $61.3k, a first for this cycle (CoinDesk using Glassnode data). STH pain is near total More than 95% of short-term holder supply sat underwater in early June, per Glassnode’s Week On-chain, a hallmark of late-stage drawdowns (Glassnode Research). Majority of supply below cost CryptoQuant-based analysis showed about 51.6% of BTC supply in loss on June 10, up from roughly 34% a month earlier, a capitulation-style jump (CryptoRank reporting CryptoQuant). LTHs still anchor supply Long-term holders control ~14.8M BTC, around 75% of circulating supply, with ~5.58M of those coins currently at an unrealized loss (ChainReport citing Glassnode).
Supply in loss is simple: take each coin’s last on-chain move, treat that as a rough cost basis, then ask if price is below it. If yes, that coin sits at an unrealized loss.
When more than half the network is underwater, behavior changes. Short-term holders tend to de-risk, miners may hedge a bit more, and leverage usually thins out. At the same time, price can probe lower because bids get timid while sellers are motivated.
Across early to mid June, multiple datasets showed the flip. On June 4, coins in loss outnumbered coins in profit, with about 10.5M BTC in loss versus 9.8M in profit (CoinDesk using Glassnode). Within days, CryptoQuant-tracked supply in loss hit roughly 51.6% of circulating coins, a big jump from roughly a third a month earlier (CryptoRank).
Glassnode’s Week On-chain added the knife twist: over 95% of short-term holder supply was under water. That basically means almost everyone who bought recently was red at the same time (Glassnode Research).
Long-term holders, defined on-chain as holding for roughly 155 days or more, still control the lion’s share of supply. Recent reads point to about 14.8M BTC in LTH hands, roughly three quarters of circulating coins, with around 5.58M of those coins below cost right now (ChainReport citing Glassnode).
That mix matters. LTHs in profit are sturdy hands. LTHs in loss can be even sturdier, paradoxically, because their cost bases are older and often tied to conviction. But stress does creep in when macro, regulation, or liquidity bites. Think of them as the bedrock that cracks only under real pressure.
Holder cohortWhat they ownTypical stress behaviorWhy it matters now Short-term holders Recent inflows with high cost basis variance De-risk quickly, sell into weakness, hunt bounces Over 95% underwater earlier in June, so they anchor near-term selling pressure (Glassnode Research). Long-term holders ~14.8M BTC, ~75% of supply Spend less in drawdowns, average in, sell into confirmed uptrends They are the likely backstop. ~5.58M LTH coins sit at unrealized loss and could set the floor if they keep holding (ChainReport).
Pro tip: Watch LTH Spent Output Profit Ratio and LTH supply change. If LTHs start realizing heavy losses or their total supply contracts quickly, the bedrock is wobbling.
A final whoosh lower as weak hands exit, funding goes flat, and long-liquidations burn off. You would likely see a burst in realized losses and maybe a short-lived spike in exchange inflows. LTH selling would still look modest relative to STHs. This is typical near cyclical base-building.
Price chops sideways to slightly down while loss metrics improve quietly. Derivatives open interest resets, basis normalizes, and realized price bands catch up. It feels boring. That boredom often repairs the market better than a dramatic wick.
Price undercuts a visible low, triggers stops, then rips back above key levels as supply shift confirms on-chain. This one only sticks if spot demand absorbs the dip. LTH distribution must stay muted for the move to hold.
Risk note: On-chain cost basis is an inference, not a brokerage statement. Sophisticated desks can move coins without changing risk. Treat the signals as tendencies, not certainties.
This is not advice. It is a framework to think through outcomes and avoid forced errors.
Pro tip: Keep a post-trade journal. Log what you saw in supply-in-loss, realized loss streaks, and LTH behavior at the time. You will spot your own blind spots fast.
Chart of Short‑Term Holder % in Profit (Glassnode, Jun 10, 2026): shows STH % in profit collapsing to ~3% (i.e., >95% underwater), visually highlighting how recent buyers are the primary cohort currently in loss — a key driver of short‑term sell pressure. — Source: Glassnode
On-chain, support is not just a price level. It is a cluster of cost bases and holder types that decide not to sell. If LTHs in loss hold firm while STHs exhaust, you often see a shelf where dips get absorbed repeatedly.
None of these guarantee the bottom. But together they form a testable map. Failures on this map, like a sudden burst of LTH realized losses, tell you the shelf is not ready.
News cycles will try to assign one reason for every move. The chain rarely agrees with single-cause stories. Right now, the numbers are blunt. Record loss supply, majority underwater at points, and STHs nearly universally red. LTHs hold most of the coins and a sizable chunk of their own stack is below cost too.
That configuration can build durable bases because the impatient money has little left to sell. It can also crack if external shocks demand cash. The only way to travel this without betting your account is to keep watching who sells and at what cost basis, then let the tape confirm.
If you want steady coverage that connects these on-chain reads with policy and macro, Crypto Daily tracks this story without the hype. Catch the latest at Crypto Daily.
Not automatically. Records tell you stress is high, which often appears near base-building. But these phases can persist. The stronger read is when loss metrics cool while LTHs keep holding and price starts printing higher lows.
They are the main structural support, yes. LTHs control roughly three quarters of supply, and they typically sell less in drawdowns. But they are not invincible. A rise in LTH realized losses would warn that support is weakening.
Because short-term holders tend to be the marginal sellers and buyers. When almost all of them are red, rallies face overhead supply from breakeven selling. It also means a single strong bounce can cascade if it flips enough STHs back to profit.
Supply in loss share, LTH supply change or LTH SOPR, and STH percent in profit. Together they show who is stressed, who is distributing, and whether pain is easing or building.
Net inflows during drawdowns often precede sell waves. Net outflows, especially after a capitulation day, suggest coins are moving to cold storage and that selling pressure may be fading.
A decisive uptick in LTH realized losses paired with accelerating exchange inflows and lower highs on price. That says strong hands are selling and buyers are not absorbing it.
Patterns rhyme but do not repeat. The mix of holders, liquidity venues, policy backdrop, and institutional participation changes every cycle. Use the framework, not the script.
Disclaimer: This article is provided for informational purposes only. It is not offered or intended to be used as legal, tax, investment, financial, or other advice.


