Bitcoin’s latest sell-off has triggered panic-driven selling activity, but on-chain data suggests the market is taking a less damaging route than it did during February’s correction. Glassnode reports that realized losses during the June decline peaked around $1.4 billion, well below the approximately $2.6 billion peak recorded in February.
While loss-taking appears to have eased in intensity, the broader “capitulation” picture still shows more selling than buying: the 30-day smoothed realized profit-to-loss ratio is hovering around 0.28, a very low reading for the year. The key question for traders now is whether strengthening spot demand can hold up as derivatives positioning cools.
Bitcoin’s realized profit-to-loss dynamics point to an environment where investors continue to lock in losses more often than they capture gains. In Glassnode-style realized metrics, that imbalance is often interpreted as a capitulation-like phase—an extended period where selling pressure dominates, even if the market fails to fully reset sentiment.
The 30-day smoothed realized profit-to-loss ratio at roughly 0.28 underscores that selling pressure hasn’t fully disappeared. However, the magnitude of realized losses tells a more nuanced story.
According to the data cited in the analysis, Bitcoin’s seven-day moving average realized loss peaked near $2.6 billion during February’s sell-off. During the June decline, realized losses reached about $1.4 billion before cooling to approximately $558 million. The gap between these two episodes suggests that—even with similar price zones—fewer participants are choosing to sell at a loss than they did in February.
Crypto analyst Axel Adler Jr. characterized the latest period as the second wave of panic selling in 2026. In his commentary, Adler argued the realized-loss evidence indicates capitulation is “almost twice as low” versus February.
That framing matters because “capitulation” is not only about price movement; it’s also about who sells, and how costly those sales are in realized terms. If realized losses are lower while the profit-to-loss ratio remains weak, the market may be experiencing a different mix of behavior: more caution and less aggressive churn, rather than the same level of forced liquidation seen earlier.
Glassnode’s capital flow metrics also support the idea of reduced pressure. The realized cap—measuring the aggregate cost basis of circulating Bitcoin—stands at about $1.07 trillion. It has declined 1.45% over the past 90 days, pointing to continued capital withdrawal, but the realized cap’s seven-day change is only -0.18%, indicating outflows are close to stalling relative to earlier periods.
Perhaps the most actionable development comes from the spot market’s orderbook behavior. Glassnode reports that Binance’s spot orderbook depth imbalance has flipped toward bids, with a ratio of 0.8. In other words, buy-side liquidity is exceeding resting sell orders by the widest margin since December 2025.
In practical terms, stronger bid depth can help absorb sell pressure during pullbacks, making it easier for the market to stabilize after dips. Glassnode’s analysis emphasizes this shift: the spot book is showing a stronger willingness to defend prices rather than distribute into rallies.
Derivatives activity is adding further context. The analysis notes that Binance open interest (OI) experienced one of its largest daily reversals since April. Open interest moved to -$620 million from $258 million over the prior 24 hours, implying a net reversal of nearly $878 million.
Sharp OI reversals often indicate a rebalancing in leverage—either traders reducing exposure or positioning moving in the opposite direction after a crowded trade unwinds. While spot improvements suggest buyers are willing to step in, the derivatives reset may reduce the likelihood of downside acceleration driven by heavily leveraged sells.
Taken together, the combination of stronger spot depth and less aggressive derivatives positioning creates a more constructive near-term microstructure than during deeper capitulation phases.
Investors should watch whether this bid dominance in spot liquidity can persist as volatility returns, and whether realized losses keep trending lower without the realized profit-to-loss ratio slipping further into more extreme capitulation readings. The data also leaves an important uncertainty: stronger spot support does not automatically guarantee a durable bottom, so traders may need confirmation through continued stabilization in both realized metrics and orderbook depth.
This article was originally published as Bitcoin’s ‘capitulation’ weakens further as spot liquidity turns supportive: Glassnode on Crypto Breaking News – your trusted source for crypto news, Bitcoin news, and blockchain updates.


