Bitcoin may be entering a phase of seller exhaustion, as on chain data indicates a steady decline in realized losses and improving market balance. After reaching a low near $60k on Feb. 5, 2026, Bitcoin has spent more than two months consolidating, gradually moving toward the $70k range despite broader macroeconomic uncertainty and rising oil prices linked to geopolitical tensions.

Recent blockchain analytics show that realized losses have dropped to approximately $400 million per day, a sharp decrease from peak levels of nearly $2 billion recorded on Nov. 21, 2025, and again on Feb. 5, 2026. Those earlier spikes exceeded losses seen during the 2022 bear market, highlighting how intense selling pressure had been before the recent slowdown.

Additional on-chain indicators suggest a gradual transition from heavy selling to renewed buying interest. The profit-to-loss ratio has risen to 1.4, its highest level since January 2026, indicating that realized profits are now exceeding realized losses.
Seven day average realized profits currently stand near $300 million per day, close to 12-month lows, suggesting investors who purchased Bitcoin near $60,000 are beginning to secure modest gains.
Together, declining realized losses and improving profitability metrics signal fading sell-side pressure, increasing the likelihood that Bitcoin is approaching a stabilization phase as market participants shift toward cautious accumulation.
Disclaimer
This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial, investment, or legal advice. Cryptocurrency trading involves risk and may result in financial loss.

