Realized Bitcoin Losses Rise To FTX Crash Levels: Glassnode

Bitcoin has taken a slide back to its April level of around $83,000, with mounting selling pressure prompting many investors to sell at a loss, reminiscent of major historic market crashes.

Realized losses on Bitcoin (BTC) have surged to levels not seen since the 2022 FTX collapse, according to blockchain data platform Glassnode.

โ€œThe scale and speed of these losses reflect a meaningful washout of marginal demand as recent buyers unwind into the drawdown,โ€ Glassnode noted in an X post on Friday.

Glassnodeโ€™s observation came minutes before Bitcoin slipped as low as $80,500 on Coinbase, marking a 36% decline from its all-time high of $126,210 recorded just weeks ago in early October.

Short-term holders driving the capitulation

According to Glassnode, a big chunk of selling in the ongoing Bitcoin crash is due to short-term holders.

Data from analytics platform CryptoQuant shares a similar perspective, noting that short-term selling โ€œoften marks a local bottom if the price quickly reclaims the cost basis.โ€

โ€œFailing to do so historically indicates a deeper bearish trend or confirms a bear market,โ€ CryptoQuant wrote on X on Thursday.

Source: CryptoQuant

Although many market observers say the current downturn could signal the end of the bull market that began in 2023, prominent industry figures such as Jan3โ€™s Samson Mow have cast doubt on the onset of a crypto winter.

โ€œHow can we have a bear market when we havenโ€™t even had a proper bull market?โ€ Mow asked in a post on X on Thursday, referring to growing caution across the market.

Where is the bottom?

With Bitcoin in the red for four straight weeks and the Crypto Fear & Greed Index plunging into โ€œExtreme Fear,โ€ the question of how low BTC could fall has become a major concern.

โ€œWeโ€™ve been slicing through support levels like butter lately, and nobody seems to want to try and catch the knife,โ€ Quantum Economics CEO Mati Greenspan told Cointelegraph, adding:

โ€œWhile I utterly reject the notion that weโ€™re heading into a multi-year bear market, with the speed of the current meltdown, the bears may hit their targets much sooner than expected.โ€

The collapse of FTX in November 2022 came on the heels of the Terra Luna crash six months earlier, as Bitcoin dropped from around $33,000 in May to below $16,000 by November. Some observers linked the two events, speculating that FTXโ€™s liquidity crisis may have begun earlier than publicly disclosed.

Cryptocurrencies, Analysis, Bitcoin Price
Bitcoin price chart from January 2022 to October 2023. Source: CoinGecko

After bottoming out at around $15,700, the BTC price had remained below $20,000 for two months before starting its path to the bull market that began in 2023, according to CoinGecko data.

Related: Bitcoin sinks under $90K: BitMine, Bitwise execs tip bottom this week

According to some major industry bulls, a market bottom could arrive within a similar time frame this time.

Tom Lee, co-founder of Fundstrat Global Advisors and head of Ether (ETH) treasury strategy at BitMine, has predicted that Bitcoin could rebound to between $150,000 and $200,000 by the end of January 2026.