CryptoQuant says Bitcoin's most likely bear market bottom sits near $53,600 as demand weakens, ETF outflows accelerate, and key capitulation signals remain absent.
Bitcoin News
Bitcoin (BTC) fell to roughly $59,000 on June 6, its lowest level in this bear market cycle. The asset recovered to around $62,150 by June 10, according to CoinMarketCap data. Despite the rebound, on-chain analytics firm CryptoQuant said a confirmed cycle bottom has not yet formed.
Source: CoinMarketCap
In November 2022, the collapse of FTX briefly pushed BTC below the realized price before the market recovered. Moreno said the current $62,150 price sits approximately 9% above the $53,600 level. "Historically, it's a level that would confirm a bottom. It doesn't mean that we necessarily hit it, but it is still a possibility, especially with Bitcoin's demand weakness," he said.
Demand Turns Sharply Negative
CryptoQuant described current Bitcoin demand conditions as "deeply unfavorable." Total BTC demand, which combines speculative perpetual futures activity with apparent spot demand, fell by 652,000 BTC in the most recent week measured. That was the largest single-week contraction since January 2022.
The firm said this trend means there are fewer BTC buyers now than there were a year ago. Moreno wrote that this removes the demand foundation needed for any price recovery to hold. He added that a bull market requires a constructive demand recovery, and that condition is absent from current data.
ETF Outflows Reach a 2-Year Low
Spot BTC ETFs recorded only one day of net inflows between May 14 and June 10. Total outflows during that period exceeded $4.8 billion, according to data from Farside Investors. CryptoQuant said ETFs are now expanding net supply rather than absorbing selling pressure.
No Capitulation Signal Yet
Bitcoin holders realized losses totaling 187,000 BTC over the past 30 days. That is well below the 400,000 BTC recorded when BTC first broke below $60,000 in February 2026. It is also far below the 1.2 million BTC in losses seen during the FTX-driven bottom in November 2022.
Moreno said the low level of realized losses means a large share of holders remain above water and have not reached the threshold of panic selling. Major crypto cycle bottoms have historically followed periods of heavy selling and seller exhaustion. Neither condition is present in CryptoQuant's current data.
BTC has declined 6.6% over the past seven days and sits 51% below its all-time high of $126,080, according to CoinMarketCap data. Moreno said the $53,600 level should be treated as a valuation floor candidate until total demand stabilizes, ETF flows recover, and realized losses reach bear market capitulation-level peaks.
Related Article: Bitcoin Mirrors 2022 Bear Pattern, Says CryptoQuant
