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Bitcoin faces pivotal week amid Fed cues and on-chain shifts

Bitcoin price is entering a pivotal week with several on-chain models pushing the market’s floor lower just as investors brace for fresh signals from the Federal Reserve and the US labor market.

The shift has sharpened a debate that is no longer centered only on how low the flagship digital asset could fall, but on how long the repair process may take, even if the worst of the selling is nearing exhaustion.

Alphractal data shows Bitcoin’s short-term holder realized price bands have dropped sharply in recent weeks, pulling down a level that traders watch for signs of capitulation.

Joao Wedson, the firm’s chief executive, said past cycles often completed a capitulation event when Bitcoin approached the lower blue band, creating a strong local buying opportunity. With that band now lower, the model points to a possible bottom near $50,000 or slightly below.

Bitcoin Short-Term Holders Realized Price Bands (Source: Alphractal)

Meanwhile, other widely followed on-chain signals are clustering in a similar range. Willy Woo has said Bitcoin could bottom between $46,000 and $54,000, while the CVDD floor sits near $45,500 and continues to rise gradually.

Together, those measures suggest the zone where deep-value buyers may begin to step in has shifted lower amid intensifying volatility and uncertainty.

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Support is forming, but stress is still building

Glassnode’s cost-basis data points to a market still trying to build support higher up.

According to the firm, Bitcoin is trading near the lower end of the $60,000 to $70,000 range, where newer buyers accumulated supply, but the size of that cluster remains thinner than the bases that formed before stronger recoveries in earlier cycles.

However, the pressure under the surface has become harder to ignore as BTC continues to struggle.

CEX.io’s Bitcoin Impact Index shows that more than 30% of Bitcoin held by long-term holders is now in the red, the highest share since 2023.

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The firm said more than 4.6 million Bitcoin owned by long-term holders are underwater, while 47% of all Bitcoin in existence is now at a loss, matching the levels seen during the most stressed weeks of February.

That deterioration is notable because long-term holders had only recently returned to selling at a profit.

By the end of the latest week, SOPR had fallen to 0.724, erasing six weeks of improvement and leaving long-term holders selling at their deepest losses in three years. Short-term holders were also under pressure, with realized profit and loss sliding to its lowest level since late January.

The pattern resembles earlier breakdown phases. CEX.io compared the current setup with mid-2018 and mid-2022, when a similar divergence emerged between price action and on-chain conviction before Bitcoin suffered another leg lower.

The firm said the latest jump in its stress index was the sharpest since late January, when Bitcoin went on to record one of its most difficult stretches of 2026.

Notably, market liquidity has weakened at the same time. Stablecoin net flows to exchanges swung from a strongly positive daily average to a deeply negative reading, removing one of the market’s key supports.

Data from SosoValue showed that spot Bitcoin ETFs posted $296 million in net outflows in the week through March 28 after four straight weeks of inflows, while spot Ethereum ETFs lost $206.58 million.

US Bitcoin ETFs Weekly Flows in March 2026 (Source: SoSoValue)

With institutional flows pulling back, the burden of support shifts back to spot buyers, long-term holders, and short covering.

Mining economics are adding another layer of pressure. Between 15% and 20% of miners are now unprofitable after the hashprice rate fell to a post-halving low of around $28 per petahash per second per day in February.

Their elevated energy costs have increased the risk of treasury selling, while Bhutan’s steady Bitcoin sales have reinforced the broader sense of supply overhang in the market.

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History points to a longer recovery

Meanwhile, the case for caution is not limited to price targets. Ecoinometrics, a BTC analysis platform, said any sharp recoveries in Bitcoin rarely happen in isolation and usually require a broader change in the macro backdrop, often including a shift in monetary policy.

That backdrop has not yet turned supportive enough to justify expectations of a fast rebound.

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