Bitcoin’s 1-week to 1-month holding ratio has dropped to levels historically seen near bear market lows, suggesting it could be approaching an undervalued zone.Bitcoin’s 1-week to 1-month holding ratio has dropped to levels historically seen near bear market lows, suggesting it could be approaching an undervalued zone.

Bitcoin Nearing Undervalued Territory? CryptoQuant Flags Key On-Chain Signal

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CryptoQuant sparked fresh debate in markets this week after posting a short-but-sharp take on a once-obscure on-chain gauge: the one-week-to-one-month holding ratio. The firm pointed out that this ratio, a measure of how much Bitcoin is being held for very short windows versus slightly longer ones, has plunged to levels that, in past cycles, clustered close to bear-market lows. That doesn’t mean it’s a guaranteed bottom, CryptoQuant cautioned, but it does suggest the market is inching into a zone that could be described as “relatively undervalued.”

The timing of that observation matters because Bitcoin’s price action has been volatile but resilient. As of Wednesday, BTC traded near $69,200 after a run that briefly pushed the token above $70,000 earlier in the week amid easing geopolitical risk and a softer dollar. Prices are moving in a range rather than on a straight trajectory, which fits the picture painted by CryptoQuant: an environment where liquidity metrics flash caution even as broader risk appetite flickers back on.

Is Bitcoin Near a Bottom?

What makes the 1-week/1-month holding ratio noteworthy is its track record. When short-term holders shrink their share relative to slightly longer-term holders, it often signals a pause in speculative froth and a consolidation of supply into steadier hands. CryptoQuant’s historical lens shows that previous dramatic drops in this ratio coincided with points that later looked like local or cycle lows, not because the indicator predicted a rebound, but because it measured a change in the market’s internal plumbing: less churning, more stacking. That nuance is crucial for investors choosing whether to “wait for the bottom” or start scaling in.

The on-chain narrative is being matched by pockets of demand off-chain. Large institutional moves and strategic buys have peppered headlines this month, underscoring that some allocators are using volatility as an entry point. High-profile purchases by major holders have helped sustain upward pressure even as macro uncertainty lingers.

Market technicians and allocators are responding pragmatically. Rather than betting everything on a single low, the approach gaining traction, echoed by CryptoQuant’s advice, is to distribute risk across a series of price levels that offer a blend of reasonable valuation and probability. In plain terms: dollar-cost averaging with an eye on on-chain signals and macro catalysts, rather than trying to catch an exact nadir.

Short-term traders will watch incoming data, exchange flows, ETF flows, macro prints and the next round of on-chain signals for clues. Historical price records show how quickly Bitcoin can reverse course once supply tightens and risk sentiment improves; that backdrop helps explain why some investors are already nibbling here while others stay defensive.

In an uneasy market, the takeaway is familiar: indicators don’t hand you a bottom on a plate, but they do frame the odds. With the 1-week to 1-month holding ratio now near levels that historically marked attractive risk-reward zones, many professional watchers say it’s a time for cautious positioning, building exposure where valuation and probability line up, rather than all-or-nothing calls.

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