The post Bitcoin trades below ETF cost basis as profitable supply falls to cycle lows appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Bitcoin is trading below the average The post Bitcoin trades below ETF cost basis as profitable supply falls to cycle lows appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Bitcoin is trading below the average

Bitcoin trades below ETF cost basis as profitable supply falls to cycle lows

3 min read

Bitcoin is trading below the average cost basis of U.S. spot exchange-traded fund [ETF] investors after recording its second- and third-largest weekly outflows on record. 

The shift coincides with a sharp contraction in the amount of BTC held in profit across the network.

According to Galaxy Research data, Bitcoin slipped below the aggregate ETF average purchase price following consecutive weeks of heavy redemptions. This pushed the average ETF holder into unrealized losses. 

Weekly outflows exceeded several billion dollars in late January, and figures are expected to rise further.

At the same time, on-chain data shows a broad deterioration in holder profitability. 

CryptoQuant’s Supply in Profit metric indicates that the number of bitcoins held at an unrealized gain has dropped to around 11–12 million BTC, down from roughly 19–20 million BTC in August. The decline marks one of the lowest readings of the current cycle.

Bitcoin ETF positioning flips underwater

The ETF cost-basis chart highlights a rare alignment between institutional positioning and on-chain stress. 

While earlier drawdowns left ETF buyers largely insulated, the latest pullback has pushed spot prices below the blended entry level of U.S. ETF inflows accumulated since launch.

Source: Glassnode

Bitcoin was trading near $74,000 at the time of the latest data. At the same time, the ETF average cost basis sits above $84,000, indicating that a significant share of institutional inflows are now underwater. 

Historically, periods when spot prices remain below ETF cost basis tend to suppress short-term demand, as inflows slow and redemptions become more sensitive to volatility.

Profitable supply compression deepens

The drop in supply held in profit suggests the drawdown is no longer confined to recent buyers or leveraged traders. Instead, profitability has been eroded across a wide range of holder cohorts.

Since October, every rebound attempt has failed to meaningfully rebuild profitable supply. Rallies into December and early January saw only modest recoveries before renewed downside pressure pushed more coins into unrealized loss. 

The latest move lower erased much of that progress, returning the metric toward cycle lows.

Source: CryptoQuant

This pattern points to a market transitioning away from profit-driven distribution toward loss-driven consolidation. 

As more holders slip underwater, selling pressure often slows after the initial decline. Also, price action becomes increasingly range-bound as participants hesitate to realize losses.

Market implications

The convergence of ETF losses and declining on-chain profitability helps explain the market’s recent behavior: muted rebounds, thinner liquidity, and heightened sensitivity to macro headlines. 

Rather than a leverage-led liquidation cascade, current price action reflects a structural reset in positioning.

Stabilization typically requires either a prolonged consolidation that allows cost bases to adjust, or renewed demand strong enough to lift prices back above key aggregate entry levels. Until then, upside momentum may remain constrained.


Final Thoughts

  • Bitcoin’s drawdown is increasingly driven by profitability exhaustion, with both ETF investors and on-chain holders now largely underwater.
  • A sustained recovery will likely depend on prices reclaiming the ETF cost basis or a period of consolidation that rebuilds profitable supply.

Next: The Epstein files revive an old Bitcoin question: Who really created BTC?

Source: https://ambcrypto.com/bitcoin-trades-below-etf-cost-basis-as-profitable-supply-falls-to-cycle-lows/

Disclaimer: The articles reposted on this site are sourced from public platforms and are provided for informational purposes only. They do not necessarily reflect the views of MEXC. All rights remain with the original authors. If you believe any content infringes on third-party rights, please contact [email protected] for removal. MEXC makes no guarantees regarding the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the content and is not responsible for any actions taken based on the information provided. The content does not constitute financial, legal, or other professional advice, nor should it be considered a recommendation or endorsement by MEXC.

You May Also Like

Securities Fraud Investigation Into Corcept Therapeutics Incorporated (CORT) Announced – Shareholders Who Lost Money Urged To Contact Glancy Prongay Wolke & Rotter LLP, a Leading Securities Fraud Law Firm

Securities Fraud Investigation Into Corcept Therapeutics Incorporated (CORT) Announced – Shareholders Who Lost Money Urged To Contact Glancy Prongay Wolke & Rotter LLP, a Leading Securities Fraud Law Firm

LOS ANGELES–(BUSINESS WIRE)–Glancy Prongay Wolke & Rotter LLP, a leading national shareholder rights law firm, today announced that it has commenced an investigation
Share
AI Journal2026/02/05 04:00
Over 80% of 135 Ethereum L2s record below 1 user operation per second

Over 80% of 135 Ethereum L2s record below 1 user operation per second

The post Over 80% of 135 Ethereum L2s record below 1 user operation per second  appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Ethereum’s L2s are not doing too well. Data
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2026/02/05 03:52
‘Alien Earth’ Composer Jeff Russo Dives Into Score For FX Series

‘Alien Earth’ Composer Jeff Russo Dives Into Score For FX Series

The post ‘Alien Earth’ Composer Jeff Russo Dives Into Score For FX Series appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. FX’s Alien: Earth — Pictured: Timothy Olyphant as Kirsh. Courtesy of Patrick Brown/FX The following contains certain spoilers for Alien: Earth! When it came time to marry picture and music for FX’s Alien: Earth, series creator Noah Hawley did what he’s done for close to 20 years: call up Jeff Russo. “[He] said, ‘I’m adapting the Alien IP, for television. What do you think, musically?’” Russo recalls over Zoom. “We started talking and I began writing music for it. It seemed like…not a foregone conclusion, but a conversation that was being had.” A founder of Tonic and a previous member of Low Stars, the composer has scored all of Hawley’s film and television projects since The Unusuals (2009). “Everything I’ve learned about making music for storytelling, I learned by doing with him,” Russo adds. “He really knows what he wants. And when you have a confident filmmaker that is also open to artistic collaboration, it’s the best of all the worlds.” The first small screen translation of the nearly 50-year-old franchise known for straddling horror, sci-fi, and action genres, Alien: Earth takes place two years before the events of the 1979 original and nearly six decades before Aliens. “We talk a lot about trying to figure out what the underlying property is making our audience feel,” Russo explains. “Trying to create a unique narrative and way of telling the story, but at the same time, making the audience feel that same feeling. In this case, there’s that feeling of dread. There’s that tense, eerie feeling created with such a deft hand in Alien. And then [came Aliens, which was] such a great action piece. So how are we going to take those two ideas and sort of mix them together, have that be something unique and different, while eliciting the…
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/09/18 07:23