Bitcoin (BTC) sellers are nursing their largest overall losses since March 2020, one on-chain metric suggests.
Data from on-chain analytics firm Glassnode confirms that Bitcoin’s spent output profit ratio (SOPR) has now fallen to two-year lows.
As Bitcoin holders attempt to pull funds from exchanges into non-custodial wallets, those moving coins around are doing so at multi-year high losses.
SOPR divides the realized value of coins in a spent output by their value at creation. In other words, as Glassnode summarizes, “price sold / price paid.”
As Cointelegraph reported, SOPR fluctuates around 1, and tends to be below that level during Bitcoin bear markets and above it in bull markets.
This is logical, as unrealized losses increase through the bear market phase, leading to relatively larger overall realized losses once coins are sold.
As such, the end of bear markets tends to see lower SOPR. As of Nov. 14, the metric's 7-day moving averag was at 0.9847 — its lowest since the March 2020 COVID-19 cross-market crash.
SOPR has further implications for BTC price action.
Should BTC/USD start gaining, hodlers will have an incentive to sell at cost price or slightly above to avoid losses. This leads to a supply glut, which without buyers logically forces the price lower again.
SOPR thus acts as a useful forecasting tool for potential price trends, with 1 once again being the important line in the sand when it comes to hodlers turning to sellers.
“Due to the fundamental nature of underlying metrics on which the SOPR relies on, it would be fair to speculate that the Spent Output Profit Ratio is influencing price changes,” Renatio Shirakashi, the metric’s creator, stated in an introduction to it in 2019.
March 2020 briefly saw SOPR dip to
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