Bitcoin (BTC) tipped below $75,000 on Wednesday, with onchain data suggesting a market defined by cautious optimism rather than strong bullish conviction, according to a Wednesday report from Glassnode.
The report highlights a "top-heavy" cost basis structure, in which a large share of recent investors entered near current prices, leaving the market particularly sensitive to shifts in demand.
Glassnode mentions three key pricing levels, including the Short-Term Holder (STH) cost basis at roughly $78,000, the True Market Mean at around $78,300 and the long-term Realized Price near $54,200.
Recent accumulation around the $75,000–$78,000 range has pushed the average entry price of short-term holders in close alignment with the True Market Mean.
Sustained trading above this price range could indicate a transition toward early bullish conditions, while failure to hold may expose the market to sharper downside reactions.
"Should price stabilize above the True Market Mean, a transition toward pre-bull conditions remains plausible," Glassnode wrote.
Investor activity also reflects a cautious tone. The Realized Profit/Loss Ratio is currently at 1.56, showing that investors are taking profits, but not at levels typically seen in early stages of strong bull markets. Glassnode stated that this suggests the earlier price recovery has been driven more by careful repositioning than aggressive buying.
"The [earlier] price recovery, while constructive, appears to have been carried by cautious repositioning rather than the aggressive demand influx that has characterized more durable cycle transitions," the report stated.
Short-term holder profitability trends reflect a similar pattern. The cohort's net realized profit and loss has improved significantly from deeply negative levels in February to near-neutral territory at -0.02%. While this marks a notable recovery, it remains insufficient to confirm a decisive shift in market momentum.
Spot Volume Delta has turned negative, indicating a return to sell-side dominance after Bitcoin's rejection from the low-$80,000 region. Institutional demand has also softened, with spot Bitcoin ETFs recording outflows in the past two weeks.
"If BTC is going to push meaningfully higher from here, spot demand likely needs to step back in. Without that, the market risks drifting back into the same choppy, seller-dominated conditions that capped upside earlier in the year," the report added.
In derivatives markets, Bitcoin's implied volatility is falling, especially in the short term. One-month volatility has dropped from about 38.5% to around 33% over the past two weeks, as its price has remained within a tight range.
The fall suggests traders expect fewer sharp price moves in the near term and are less willing to pay high premiums for short-term bets or protection.
Bitcoin is trading at $75,090 at the time of writing, down 1.1% in the past 24 hours.