Bitcoin supply in loss just hit a record 10.83 million BTC, but the sharper signal is that long-term holders now control a record 14.8 million coins. That split points to a market under real stress, not a clean capitulation event.
The latest reading came after bitcoin fell below $59,100 on Wednesday, pushing 10.83 million BTC into loss, according to CoinDesk, citing Glassnode data. The headline is bearish. The structure underneath is more complicated.
“Bitcoin's drop to around $59,100 on Wednesday pushed 10.83 million BTC into a loss, the most on record, exceeding peaks seen during past bear-market bottoms.”
Bitcoin supply in loss exposes a market split in two
The core tension is simple: almost 11 million bitcoin are underwater, while the strongest holder cohort has never controlled more supply. That combination says the market is testing conviction rather than flushing everyone out at once.
Bitcoin supply in loss measures coins whose last on-chain movement occurred at a higher price than the current market price. It’s a useful stress gauge, but it doesn’t prove those holders are about to sell. Unrealized pain only becomes market pressure when coins move, especially toward venues where they can be sold.
That distinction matters now. CoinDesk notes that bitcoin has repeatedly tested the $60,000 level since February and briefly dropped below it several times. Four months ago, supply in loss peaked at 9.8 million BTC. It climbed to 10.78 million in early June. Now it has reached 10.83 million BTC.
For related XOOMAR context on this same price zone, see Thursday's Core PCE Could Crack Bitcoin's $59K Line and Bitcoin's $60K Rebound Exposes Crypto's AI Rally Problem. Those pieces sit beside the on-chain picture here: price is pressing a level where holder behavior becomes more important than narratives.
The 10.83 million BTC loss reading looks worse beside 14.8 million held long term
The data set has two numbers that should be read together, not separately.
| Metric | Latest reading | Source context |
|---|---|---|
| Total BTC in loss | 10.83 million BTC | Record high, above prior bear-market bottom levels cited by CoinDesk |
| BTC in loss held by long-term holders | 5.58 million BTC | Second-highest on record, behind March 2020 |
| Long-term holder supply | 14.8 million BTC | Record high |
| Circulating supply referenced by CoinDesk | Roughly 20 million BTC | Long-term holders control close to 75% |
Glassnode defines long-term holders as investors that have held coins for at least 155 days. CoinDesk reports that this group now owns about 14.8 million BTC, another all-time high. With roughly 20 million BTC in circulation, that puts close to 75% of circulating supply in long-term hands.
The stress is inside that cohort too. CoinDesk says 5.58 million BTC held by long-term holders are now at a loss, the second-highest level on record behind March 2020, when more than 5.6 million of the cohort’s bitcoin were underwater. In other words, even committed holders are carrying losses.
XOOMAR analysis: that does not automatically mean selling pressure is imminent. It means the market’s next move depends less on the size of the unrealized loss and more on whether long-term holders keep coins dormant. If they do, the headline loss figure may overstate near-term sell pressure. If they don’t, the record reading becomes much more dangerous.
Underwater bitcoin holders won't react as one block
Not every underwater holder behaves the same way. The source data separates long-term holders from the broader market, and that split is critical.
Recent buyers are usually more exposed to disappointment because their entry points sit closer to recent prices. Long-term holders, by contrast, are defined by time in the asset. CoinDesk notes that historically they tend to accumulate and continue holding throughout bear markets, then sell into periods of peak bull-market strength.
That history supports a cautious accumulation thesis, but it doesn’t prove current buying. CoinDesk says long-term holders control a record 14.8 million BTC. It does not show fresh purchase flows, exchange balances, ETF-linked flows, miner selling, or leverage data.
XOOMAR inference: the market is divided between underwater supply that may be emotionally fragile and long-term supply that has historically been less reactive. The evidence supports that split. It does not support stronger claims about forced selling, liquidity gaps, or institutional positioning without more data.
Prior loss spikes show pain can mark exhaustion, not just breakdown
CoinDesk says around 10.5 million BTC in loss has been broadly consistent with levels seen near cycle lows in 2019, 2020, and 2022. The current 10.83 million BTC reading exceeds that zone.
That comparison cuts both ways. On one hand, record underwater supply confirms heavy damage. A market does not put nearly 11 million coins into loss unless price has fallen far enough to trap a large share of recent movement.
On the other hand, prior cycle stress points show that high supply in loss can appear near periods of exhaustion. The source does not say bitcoin has bottomed now. It says the current reading is above levels seen near earlier cycle lows. That makes the metric a warning sign, but also a potential marker of late-stage stress.
The counterpoint is important: market structure changes over time, and on-chain history is not a script. A similar reading in 2026 does not have to resolve the way it did in 2019, 2020, or 2022. The metric shows pressure. Behavior determines whether that pressure turns into capitulation or absorption.
Traders and long-term investors are reading the same loss signal differently
A trader looking at Bitcoin supply in loss sees weak momentum and a market that has repeatedly tested $60,000 since February. That does not prove a breakdown is coming, but it does mean price recovery matters. If underwater holders start realizing losses, the on-chain signal would shift from passive stress to active supply.
A long-term investor sees a different setup. Long-term holders control a record 14.8 million BTC, and CoinDesk says this group has historically held through bear markets while increasing its share of supply. For that camp, the record long-term holder balance is the more important number.
Both readings can be true at once. The market can be fragile in the short term and tightly held in the long term. That’s the defining tension of this data release.
What the source does not show: miner balance-sheet pressure, corporate treasury behavior, ETF demand, futures positioning, or margin stress. Those may matter, but they are not established by the supplied data. The cleanest read is narrower: underwater supply is at a record, long-term holder control is at a record, and the market is waiting to see which side acts first.
Three paths from here: capitulation, repair, or a tighter float
The next phase depends on behavior, not the headline number.
Capitulation: If bitcoin weakens further and underwater holders begin moving coins in size, realized losses could rise. That would make the record 10.83 million BTC figure more than a paper-loss statistic.
Sideways repair: Bitcoin could spend time around contested price levels while holders adjust, losses remain mostly unrealized, and leverage resets outside the scope of this data. In that case, the market absorbs pain through time rather than a sharp flush.
Supply squeeze: If long-term holders keep controlling a record share of supply and demand returns, the reduced available float could matter. The source supports the first half of that setup, since long-term holders already control 14.8 million BTC. It does not yet prove the demand side.
The watch item is clear: Bitcoin supply in loss is flashing stress, but the decisive evidence will come from movement. If underwater coins stay still and long-term holder supply remains elevated, the market looks wounded but structurally stubborn. If those coins start moving, the record loss reading becomes a live sell-pressure signal.
Disclaimer: This XOOMAR analysis is for informational and educational purposes only. It is not financial, investment, legal, tax, or professional advice. It does not provide buy, sell, hold, price-target, portfolio, or personalized recommendations. Verify information independently and consult qualified professionals before making decisions.
The Bottom Line
- A record 10.83 million BTC in loss signals significant pressure across the market.
- Long-term holders controlling 14.8 million BTC suggests many investors are not capitulating yet.
- Bitcoin’s repeated tests of the $60,000 area make this a key level for market sentiment.
Originally published on XOOMAR. For more news and analysis, visit XOOMAR.
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