A recent CryptoQuant report identifies $53,600 as a potential baseline for Bitcoin, based on the cryptocurrency’s realized price, which averages the cost basis of its transactions across the network. Despite this metric suggesting a possible floor, the report indicates tepid demand, raising uncertainties about Bitcoin’s recovery trajectory.
Is This the New Normal for Bitcoin?
CryptoQuant’s analysis signals that $53,600 might serve as a crucial bottom for Bitcoin, aligning with its realized price. Julio Moreno, the research director, highlights that Bitcoin has historically approached similar metrics during bear markets before stabilizing or recovering.
Despite this, Moreno urges caution, observing that, with weak demand, it’s still unclear if Bitcoin has truly bottomed. The latest figures saw Bitcoin sink to nearly $59,000 before bouncing back to approximately $62,150, maintaining a 9 percent buffer over the $53,600 mark.
What Does Demand Data Reveal?
An observable decline in Bitcoin demand, with a decrease of 652,000 BTC last week, marks the largest weekly drop since early 2022. This contraction spans both futures markets and spot exchanges, painting a picture of reduced speculative interest and lackluster buying activity.
Futures and spot markets both experience reduced engagement, correlating with Bitcoin’s slip below $60,000. Long positions saw accelerated liquidation and spot sales increased, while annualized demand growth dipped below its moving average—a downturn not seen since February 2024.
The number of current buyers doesn’t match last year’s levels, undermining the sustainable demand needed for Bitcoin’s rebound.
ETF Activity and Loss Analysis
Institutional interest, once robust, has waned, with Bitcoin ETF inflows declining by 74,000 BTC—the slowest monthly rate since the introduction of U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs. Meanwhile, ETFs have led to an uptick in net supply due to position trimming.
Realized losses provide another layer of insight; past 30 days’ losses totaled 187,000 BTC, contrasting with the deeper realized losses during major downturns in February 2026 and November 2022, when losses were significantly higher.
Moreno emphasizes that the absence of widespread capitulation keeps the scenario open for Bitcoin, even at $59,000. Despite some investors averting underwater positions, typical heavy market bottoms remain elusive without robust sell-offs accompanying them.
Upcoming price movements may hinge upon demand side improvements, which remain critical for a possible sustained crypto market rally. Current data places $53,600 as a provisional valuation anchor, but without a dynamic recovery, this stability remains speculative.



