The share of bitcoin supply sitting at an unrealized loss has now risen to a level that in past cycles came hand-in-hand with full-blown seller exhaustion. A 7-day moving average of the metric hit 50% on June 9, according to a CryptoQuant update , marking the highest reading of 2026 so far.
When half the coins in circulation are underwater, underwater holders typically stop selling. That shift matters for traders trying to time a floor. The analyst behind the data, CryptoQuant contributor G a a h _ i m, flagged the move as a signal of native bitcoin capitulation—the kind that has historically preceded the formation of a durable cycle bottom.
What the metric actually measures
Bitcoin Supply in Loss simply counts the number of coins whose price at last movement was higher than the current spot price. A rising reading means more holders are in the red. The 50% mark is not a precise trigger, but it has coincided with extended seller fatigue in 2015, 2018, and the first half of 2022.
Traders often watch this indicator alongside exchange flows, miner behavior, and realized price levels. The current reading suggests that a substantial portion of the market has absorbed the decline since the highs of late 2025. In the past, such conditions paved the way for accumulation by stronger hands willing to absorb the remaining sell pressure.
What remains uncertain
No on-chain metric works in isolation. The 50% threshold is a statistical observation, not a guaranteed floor. The macro backdrop in mid-2026 differs sharply from previous capitulation windows. Regulatory developments, central bank policy, and the absence of a clear risk-on rotation all complicate the picture.
Moreover, the market has changed structurally since 2022. Institutional involvement through spot ETFs and corporate treasuries means a larger share of supply is held in illiquid, long-term custody. That could blunt the significance of the supply-in-loss signal, because institutional holders are less likely to panic-sell at underwater levels.
During the 2018 bear market, the supply in loss moving average stayed above 50% for several months before the ultimate bottom in December. In 2022, it briefly crossed the threshold in June before final capitulation in November. The current data set does not guarantee a repeat, but it does force sidelined capital to decide whether the risk-reward is shifting.
Still, the metric’s track record is hard to ignore. Traders will now watch whether the 7-day moving average stays above 50%, flattens, or quickly reverses. A sustained print at these levels, combined with declining exchange reserves, would strengthen the case for a bottoming process. A rapid move lower in the indicator, on the other hand, could suggest a false signal driven by a short-lived bounce.
The update lands at a moment when bitcoin is trading below the realized price of several key holder cohorts. If history rhymes, the next few weeks could determine whether the market has already carved out its low or whether a final washout is still ahead.


