Bitcoin is running into trouble under a key on-chain threshold for short-term holders, and analysts say that until it reclaims that level, rallies are likely to be fragile. On May 22, on-chain analyst Axel Adler Jr. flagged that Bitcoin has been trading below the Short-Term Holder (STH) Realized Price — the average acquisition price of newer BTC investors — which Adler pegs at roughly $80,217. In a snapshot he shared, Bitcoin was trading around $77,550 and the market-wide picture showed STHs now mostly underwater: realized losses of about $366 million versus realized profits of roughly $190 million, leaving a net realized P/L near –$176 million. Why this matters: when BTC sits below the STH breakeven, many short-term holders carry unrealized losses and are more likely to sell into rallies. Adler warns that until Bitcoin clears the ~$80.2K STH level, any bounces are more likely to be unconfirmed relief rallies rather than genuine trend reversals. Approaching that breakeven can actually increase selling pressure as investors defect to limit losses. Adding to the bearish backdrop, analyst Maartunn highlighted a sharp drop in the Coinbase Premium Gap — an indicator that measures the relative buying/selling activity of US-based traders on Coinbase. The premium has fallen deeply into negative territory, signaling elevated selling pressure or waning demand from US investors. Historically, strong negative readings have coincided with corrective phases or short-term fear; they can also show up near local lows if selling becomes exhausted. Price snapshot: at the time Adler posted his chart BTC was near $77.55K; at the time of writing Bitcoin traded around $75,514, down about 2.56% on the day. Bottom line: on-chain metrics suggest short-term holders are under water and US exchange flows are skewed toward selling — a combination that could keep upside capped until Bitcoin decisively reclaims the STH realized price near $80.2K. Read more AI-generated news on: undefined/news
