BTC Pullback Near Peak Levels, Yet Realized Price Metrics Indicate Bullish Momentum

Bitcoin’s Realized Price Metric Signals End of Capitulation, Start of Market Rebound

As bitcoin consolidates below its all-time high of $109,000, deeper on-chain metrics suggest a shift in market sentiment. While price records dominate headlines, they often obscure more telling indicators—such as the realized price, which measures the average cost basis for investors by tracking coins withdrawn from exchanges.

According to recent data, the average realized price for 2025 entrants sits at $93,266, with bitcoin currently trading around $105,000. That puts the average investor from this year roughly 12% in profit, a sign that sentiment may be stabilizing following a turbulent Q1.

In late January, bitcoin briefly dropped below the 2025 realized price, triggering signs of capitulation before recovering on April 22. Historically, such dips have aligned with market bottoms and preceded periods of sustained recovery.


Historical Precedent: Realized Price as a Market Thermometer

  • 2024: Bitcoin initially dipped under realized price post-ETF launch, then again more severely during the yen carry trade unwind—bottoming near $49,000.
  • 2023: A short-term capitulation occurred during the Silicon Valley Bank fallout, with BTC briefly dropping below realized price before rebounding.

These events reinforce a pattern: when price falls below the average investor cost basis, stress peaks—but so do buying opportunities.


Record Highs Are Misleading Without Context

While BTC’s major milestones—$20,000 (2017), $69,000 (2021), and now $109,000 (2025)—signal growth, they don’t capture investor positioning or sentiment. For example, in 2017, BTC’s price skyrocketed above $20,000, while realized price was only $5,149—highlighting a speculative blow-off top.

Conversely, during the 2018 bear market, BTC’s price collapsed to $3,200, converging with the all-time realized price at the time—marking a true cyclical bottom.

Today, the realized price continues to rise as new capital enters, reinforcing bitcoin’s long-term bullish structure. Unlike peak-to-peak comparisons, realized price reflects the cumulative confidence of holders, making it a more stable measure of market health.


Conclusion

The latest data suggests that a capitulation phase has already played out and the market is now entering a more constructive cycle. As more institutions and long-term holders build positions above key realized price levels, bitcoin’s foundation appears stronger—supporting the case for further upside, regardless of short-term volatility.


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