Bitcoin’s recent downturn has put the short-term whales in the deepest stress phase of this cycle. Their unrealized losses have grown to approximately $16.4 billion, reflecting the impact of Bitcoin [BTC] from above $100,000 to $60,000.
As prices fell, the more recent whale positions fell underwater, pushing unrealized gains and losses sharply into negative territory.


This deterioration is important because Short-Term Holders (STH) tend to react more aggressively during drawdowns. As losses mount, capitulation risk increases and weak beliefs are tested.
Yet similar periods have often been a late-stage reset rather than a trend conclusion.
The current reading suggests that the market is undergoing a transfer of coins from stressed participants to stronger hands. Whether pressure then peaks or increases will depend on further STH selling behavior and broader demand conditions.
Bitcoin accumulation continues to be retail-led
Despite the increasing losses among STH whales, a difference of opinion is emerging in the market. Over the past two weeks, portfolios holding less than 0.01 BTC increased their holdings by 0.36%, even as Bitcoin struggled near the $61,000 zone.


Rather than retreating alongside falling prices, smaller investors continued to add to their positions during the recession. Larger holders took a different approach.
Portfolios holding between 10 and 10,000 BTC reduced their holdings by 0.20%, indicating that whale condemnation remains limited despite the pullback.
This difference suggests that recent losses have not led to a broad retail capitulation, while larger capital continues to wait for stronger signs of stabilization before returning aggressively.
BTC enters discount territory
As retail buyers continued to increase their exposure and the whales wavered, Bitcoin’s valuation profile moved deeper into discounted territory.
According to Grayscale, the recent decline towards the $60,000 region has pushed the composite on-chain valuation indicator below zero, indicating that BTC is now trading below its long-term valuation range.


This shift emerged as selling pressure increased and leveraged positions unwound across the market. Yet the decline still looks different than previous cycle bottoms. During the bear markets of 2015, 2018 and 2022, the indicator fell below -2 and approached -4 as capitulation accelerated.
This time the valuations seem attractive, but not extreme. That could explain why accumulation continues while larger investors remain selective, leaving Bitcoin caught between stabilization and further downward pressure.
Final summary
- BTC remains under pressure as whale losses mount, while larger holders continue to hold back aggressive accumulation.
- Bitcoin is trading in discounted territory, although valuation signals have yet to reach historical capitulation extremes.
