Key Takeaways
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Bitcoin’s price remains weak following October’s historic liquidation event.
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On-chain data shows record BTC accumulation and signs of recovery.
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The MVRV ratio suggests Bitcoin could be entering an early rebound phase.
For weeks, the crypto market has been caught in a slow bleed.
After October’s black swan event, the largest liquidation cascade in crypto history, Bitcoin has struggled to find its footing.
BTC briefly dipped below $110,000 and, nearly a month later, is still hovering around the $103,000 mark.
Yet despite the gloom, on-chain data tells a different story — one of quiet accumulation and signs that the worst may already be behind us.
According to data from CryptoQuant, Bitcoin accumulation has hit an all-time high.
Over the past 30 days alone, investors have scooped up more than 375,000 BTC, including 50,000 BTC in the last 24 hours.
In fact, the number of accumulation addresses, wallets that show steady inflows but no recent outflows, has surged to record levels.
These long-term holders tend to buy when sentiment is low and prices look weak, a signal that confidence in Bitcoin’s long-term trajectory remains intact.
In less than two months, the monthly average has more than doubled, from 130,000 BTC to 262,000 BTC.
While broader market demand has softened, these wallets have continued to stack BTC — partly fueled by ETF inflows and institutional demand for exposure.
The panic that triggered October’s crash stemmed from renewed U.S.–China tariff fears and a stronger dollar, which sent leveraged traders scrambling.
But as macro pressures ease, investors appear to be regaining confidence.
Bitcoin has managed to hold above the key $100,000 psychological level, even as the Fear & Greed Index hovers in “extreme fear” territory around 20.
Historically, such levels have often preceded strong rebounds.
Supporting that optimism is Bitcoin’s MVRV ratio, a key on-chain metric comparing the coin’s market value to its realized value (essentially what investors paid for it).
It’s helpful in gauging when the exchange-traded price is below “fair value” and is also quite helpful in spotting market tops and bottoms.
According to CryptoQuant data, the ratio now sits around 1.8, its lowest since April 2025. That’s typically where Bitcoin forms mid-term bottoms or begins new recovery phases.
On-chain signs indicate a market in transition, not collapse. Despite fear-driven selling and increasing volatility, realized losses have been moderate, indicating prudent repositioning rather than capitulation.
