
Bitcoin is holding above $71,000 in a market facing serious volatility. Most participants are watching the price. A CryptoQuant report is watching something else — and what it is seeing has only appeared four times in the last decade.
The report identifies a confluence of two on-chain indicators that together are producing what it describes as one of the most compelling risk-reward setups in recent cycle history. The first and most historically significant is the Short-Term Sharpe Ratio, which has plunged deep into negative territory and is now touching the -40 threshold.
That level is not arbitrary. It is the precise reading that preceded every major accumulation window of the past ten years — 2015, 2019, 2020, and 2023. Four instances. Four subsequent substantial re-ratings of the asset. Zero exceptions.

The current moment marks the fifth time Bitcoin has entered that territory.
To be precise about what that means: the Sharpe Ratio measures risk-adjusted returns. When it reaches -40, investors are bearing extreme risk for deeply negative returns — the exact condition that historically exhausts sellers and precedes the kind of structural reset that produces the next major move higher.
Bitcoin above $71,000 is navigating volatility. The on-chain data suggests it may be navigating something else entirely.
The Flush Has Happened, But The Opportunity Has Not Opened Yet
The report’s second indicator adds the dimension that transforms a data point into a framework. Durable Bitcoin bottoms, the analysis establishes, are not events — they are processes. And that process has a consistent, observable sequence that the Buy/Sell Pressure Delta maps in real time.

The sequence begins with maximum sell pressure: the orange and red spikes below -0.05 that mark the moment when forced sellers and panic capitulators exhaust themselves simultaneously. That phase has occurred. The flush is confirmed. What follows is a gradual normalization — supply thinning, selling pressure receding, the delta crawling back toward neutral. That transition is underway. The delta is moving in the right direction.
What has not yet arrived is the asymmetric signal — the moment the delta reclaims blue Buy Pressure territory, confirming that demand is genuinely re-emerging rather than simply stabilizing in the absence of selling. That reclaim is the threshold the report identifies as historically offering the highest risk-reward entry. Every prior durable bottom produced it. The current chart has not yet.
The gap between where the delta sits now and where it needs to go is not a warning. It is a waiting period — and the report is precise about what lives inside it. Historically, the space between capitulation confirmed and demand reignited is where the most asymmetric capital deployment has occurred. Not after the blue reclaim. Before it.
The risks are real and named. Macro headwinds, liquidity constraints, and sentiment fragility could extend the transition. But the data describes a market that is closer to the beginning of an opportunity than the end of one — and that distinction, for cycle-aware investors, is the only number that matters right now.
Bitcoin Holds Range as Downtrend Momentum Fades
Bitcoin is stabilizing above $70,000 after a sharp breakdown that defined the February move lower. The chart shows a clear shift from trend to range: a prolonged decline from late 2025 gave way to a high-volume capitulation event, followed by consolidation between roughly $66,000 and $72,000. This range now defines the short-term structure, with $70,000 acting as a pivot level.

Despite the stabilization, the broader trend remains unresolved. Bitcoin continues to trade below its 50-day (blue), 100-day (green), and 200-day (red) moving averages, all trending downward. This alignment signals that bearish momentum has not fully reversed. Recent attempts to push higher have stalled near the 50-day average, indicating overhead supply remains active.
Volume provides additional context. The spike during the February sell-off reflects forced liquidations, often associated with local bottoms. Since then, volume has normalized, suggesting that the market is no longer under stress but has not yet transitioned into strong accumulation.
Structurally, this is a compression phase following a deleveraging event. A break above $72,000–$75,000 is required to shift momentum and confirm recovery. Until then, Bitcoin remains range-bound, with price action driven more by positioning than sustained directional demand.
Featured image from ChatGPT, chart from TradingView.com

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