According to data shared by CryptoQuant, this chart presents a mid- to long-term framework for understanding Bitcoin’s structural trend by combining price action with key on-chain supply metrics.
Rather than focusing on short-term volatility, the setup highlights where risk compresses, demand absorbs supply, and longer-term turning points tend to form.
Realized Price and Structural Support
Realized Price represents the average on-chain cost basis of all circulating Bitcoin. In the chart, major corrective phases occur while spot price remains close to, or slightly above, Realized Price.

These zones are important because they signal absorption rather than breakdown. When price holds near this level, the market is not experiencing widespread forced selling, but instead reallocating supply to stronger hands.
MA 209 as a Long-Term Trend Filter
The MA 209 (close) functions as a long-duration trend anchor. Each highlighted dip shows price testing or briefly slipping below this moving average before recovering. Historically, these interactions align with long-term positioning zones, not trend failure. As long as price reclaims and holds above MA 209, the broader structural uptrend remains intact.
Exchange Supply Ratio Confirms Accumulation
The declining Exchange Supply Ratio visible in the chart indicates that fewer coins are being held on exchanges over time. This reduces immediate sell pressure. Importantly, even during sideways price action and pullbacks, exchange supply continues to fall. This behavior suggests ongoing accumulation, not distribution, beneath the surface.
Supply in Profit vs. Supply in Loss
The lower panel provides insight into investor psychology. At each highlighted bottom, Supply in Loss (%) rises sharply, while Supply in Profit (%) compresses, reflecting stress and localized capitulation. These moments often coincide with price stabilization. As the two metrics intersect and reverse, Supply in Loss declines and Supply in Profit expands, marking transitions back into recovery phases.
Spot Price and Volume reinforce this dynamic. Following these intersections, volume typically increases alongside price, confirming that rebounds are supported by genuine demand rather than thin liquidity.
Structural Takeaway
Risk tends to increase when price extends far above MA 209 while Supply in Profit remains elevated, a condition associated with late-cycle expansion. More favorable risk-adjusted conditions appear when price trades near MA 209, Supply in Loss spikes, and Exchange Supply continues to decline.
From a structural perspective, the chart suggests Bitcoin remains within a long-term accumulation-driven framework, where corrections serve to redistribute supply rather than dismantle the trend. Investors focused on structure rather than noise can use these zones to better align positioning with underlying on-chain demand dynamics.






