On Thursday, U.S President Donald Trump rolled back his plans to impose new tariffs on Europe as part of his push to acquire Greenland for the country. This saw Bitcoin [BTC] prices rebound by 1% to reach $90,359. However, this bounce was quickly wiped out.
Bitcoin, which had pushed above the $ 94,500 level last week, tested the same level over the weekend. The short-term market fear around a trade war alluded to no appetite for risk-on assets, with the leading crypto plunging to a low of $87,263.
According to AMBCrypto, while the market mood has been defensive, the aforementioned price bounce was not due to sustained, aggressive buyer demand. There may be still a threat of a transition to bear market conditions.
Explaining the Bitcoin soft capitulation

Source: CryptoQuant Insights
In a post on CryptoQuant Insights, user Darkfost observed that the number of holders in profit was too small to sustain bullish demand. It was at 71% – Typically seen during a shift to a bear market.
The supply in profit needs to climb above 75% and stay above it to reflect growing market conviction. The early January bounce saw the metric bounce to 75%, but holders chose to take profits and limit losses.
A deeper decline in supply and profit would show that bearish sentiment might be intensifying.


Source: Glassnode
The MVRV evaluates Bitcoin to its “fair value” (realized value) to see if it is overvalued or undervalued. At press time, the MVRV-Z score was at 1.12 – A sign that holders witnessed unrealized profits, but not enough to trigger a mass sell-off.
For context, values below 0 capture bear market capitulation phases. The previous two market tops came when the metric was between 3 and 5.


Source: CryptoQuant
The spent output profit ratio measures whether coins are being sold at a profit or not. Since late November, the SOPR has remained below 1 for the most part, signaling that holders were selling at a loss. This investor fatigue is the “soft capitulation,” where weak hands exit the market.
If the MVRV Z-score was under 1, it would imply that the market was resetting and the price is close to fair value, or close to the average investor’s cost basis. A score of 1.12 is moderately bullish. Combined with the SOPR under 1 in recent weeks, it hinted that a local price bottom could be forming.
This can change based on macroeconomic developments in the coming months. As things stand, a transition to a full-blown bear market is not yet at hand, though Bitcoin has come close to it.
Final Thoughts
- Bitcoin supply in profit needs to climb past 75% and stay there to suggest holder conviction.
- MVRV and SOPR metrics suggested a local price bottom might be forming.
Source: https://ambcrypto.com/bitcoins-latest-price-dip-is-not-a-full-bear-market-signal-yet-heres-why/