Bitcoin has recently slipped below the pivotal $69,000 mark, as persistent selling pressure and market uncertainty converge to challenge the crypto’s resilience. This decline has raised alarm bells among investors and analysts alike, particularly as Bitcoin has retraced a significant portion of its recovery from its previous cycle lows. Analyst MorenoDV has spotlighted a significant trend in the supply data that contextualizes the current situation within a decade-long framework of Bitcoin market cycles.
Currently, Bitcoin’s Supply in Loss is reported at 40.6%, indicating that over four in ten units of Bitcoin’s circulating value are owned by holders whose cost basis exceeds the current market price. This metric reveals the extent of distress among investors as the recent correction from cycle highs has impacted many within the holder base.
However, the raw percentage alone does not encapsulate the full story. MorenoDV’s analysis unveils a long-term pattern behind the peaks of this metric, necessitating an examination of Bitcoin’s entire history of significant cycle bottoms rather than evaluating any individual reading in isolation.
Since 2015, every major Bitcoin cycle low has coincided with the Supply in Loss reaching the upper boundary of a descending trendline. Notably, each successive cycle bottom has required a lower percentage of supply in loss than its predecessor, illustrating a trend of diminishing pain at successive lows. This evolution reflects how Bitcoin’s market structure has matured, with a deeper and more committed holder base emerging over time.
Each Cycle Bottom Required Less Pain Than the Last
The MorenoDV analysis meticulously tracks the descending loss threshold throughout Bitcoin’s modern market history, shedding light on the structural changes that lend greater significance to the current 40.6% reading than mere percentage points suggest.
In the early cycles, extreme pain was a prerequisite for genuine bottoms to form—over 60% of the circulating supply needed to be underwater before market capitulation could occur. The lows seen during 2018–2019 and 2020–2022 reflected progressively lower loss thresholds, as the investor base matured and their conviction solidified. The current structural trendline now hovers near the high-40% area, a sign that the market has evolved, with ETFs, institutions, long-term holders, and high-conviction participants taking the place of weaker hands that previously needed to be fully exhausted before a bottom could form.
The prevailing reading of 40.6% positions Bitcoin in a critical stress zone, yet it has not yet reached the historical maximum opportunity level. Should weakness continue or if there is a prolonged consolidation that drives Supply in Loss back towards the descending trendline, the market could find itself in a territory that has historically represented significant accumulation opportunities across a decade of cycles.
The psychological dynamics at play behind this signal are crucial to its forward-looking relevance. An increase in supply in loss shifts market sentiment from optimism to doubt, and from doubt to a reluctant patience—this sequence exhausts reactive sellers and cultivates conditions for long-term capital to begin absorbing supply at scale.
It’s important to note that bottoms do not materialize instantaneously when this zone is approached. Historical patterns indicate volatility, potential false breakdowns, and emotional fatigue often precede the onset of recovery. Nevertheless, from a risk-reward standpoint, a retest of this decade-long structure signals one of the most critical indicators Bitcoin can present—suggesting that the market is approaching, rather than moving away from, this critical territory.
In the meantime, Bitcoin has lost substantial weekly support, trading near $69,600 after failing to hold the crucial $72,000–$75,000 support zone that underpinned the rally from March lows. This breakdown has significant technical implications, as this region had previously acted as both resistance and support over the past three months, marking a deterioration in market structure.
The weekly chart illustrates Bitcoin’s rejection from the $82,000 area before a sharp reversal, establishing a lower high relative to the cycle peak near $123,000, reinforcing the prevailing downtrend since late 2025. For bulls, the current focus is crucial, with the next significant support level identified between $64,000 and $66,000—this area previously served as a key accumulation range following February’s capitulation event.
For Bitcoin to regain its footing, it is essential for bulls to reclaim the lost $72,000–$75,000 range swiftly. Until such a recovery occurs, the path of least resistance appears to trend lower, with increasing scrutiny on whether the $64,000–$66,000 region can provide a robust foundation for a durable bottom.
