Glassnode: Bitcoin turns defensive as spot demand stays weak below $80K
Bitcoin is trading like a market that’s lost its footing, and Glassnode says the data backs that up. In its latest Week On-chain report, titled “Bears In Control” (published Feb. 4, 2026), the analytics firm argues BTC has confirmed a decisive breakdown — and that the key problem isn’t just price, it’s a demand vacuum. Spot volumes remain “structurally weak,” even after BTC rolled over from about $98K to $72K, meaning sell-side pressure hasn’t been met by sustained buying.
At the center of Glassnode’s framework is a level it calls the True Market Mean — an aggregate cost basis of the actively circulating supply, excluding long-inactive coins. That level, near $80.2K, had acted as a “final line of support” during what it calls a shallow bear phase. Now, Glassnode says it has flipped from floor to ceiling.
The level that matters now: $80.2K becomes overhead resistance
Glassnode frames the loss of the True Market Mean as a structural deterioration that has been building since late November, with market behavior increasingly resembling an “early-2022” transition from range compression into a deeper bear regime. In their view, the breakdown leaves BTC constrained inside a broader valuation corridor: $80.2K acting as overhead resistance, and the Realized Price (around $55.8K) defining a lower bound where long-term capital has historically re-engaged.
That doesn’t mean price is headed straight there — it means, in Glassnode’s model, the market is now operating without the same structural anchor.
Where demand may be forming: $70K–$80K, with a tighter “high-conviction” pocket below
If the question is “where could stabilization start,” Glassnode points to on-chain cost basis distributions — specifically the UTXO Realized Price Distribution — to map where newer buyers have begun accumulating. The report flags initial accumulation in the $70K–$80K range, and calls out a dense supply cluster between $66.9K and $70.6K as a higher-conviction zone where near-term sell pressure may be absorbed.
Glassnode’s logic here is pretty straightforward: zones with concentrated cost basis can behave like short-term shock absorbers, because there’s more “anchored” supply and a higher chance responsive demand shows up.
Stress is rising — and it’s visible in realized losses
On the stress side, Glassnode says capitulation dynamics are building. The 7-day average of realized losses has risen above $1.26B per day, reflecting a jump in investor strain after the break below the True Market Mean. It also points to a recent extreme during a rebound from the $72K region, where daily realized losses briefly surged beyond $2.4B — nearly twice the prevailing 7-day average. Glassnode notes that spikes like this have often aligned with short-term inflection points, when forced selling exhausts and price stabilizes temporarily.
Zooming out, the report adds context using Relative Unrealized Loss: stress is elevated and above the cyclical mean, but not necessarily at the historic bear-market extremes seen near the 2018 and 2022 cycle lows.
Off-chain isn’t helping: thin spot, forced deleveraging, and “protection-first” options pricing
Glassnode’s off-chain read stays defensive. It says demand from “major allocators” has softened materially, with its netflow basket flipping back into net outflows as BTC breaks down — citing weaker spot ETF flows and fading treasury-linked demand.
In derivatives, it describes a sharp liquidation cascade: long liquidations spiked to the largest print of this drawdown, which Glassnode interprets as a flush-out of leverage rebuilt into a weak spot backdrop.
Options markets, meanwhile, remain priced for turbulence. Glassnode highlights short-dated implied volatility surging toward 70% as BTC retested $73K, alongside steepening downside skew — traders paying up for puts rather than rotating into relief-rally positioning. The report also points to the 1-week volatility risk premium turning negative (around -5), meaning implied volatility is trading below realized volatility — a setup it says can force more active hedging and add short-term pressure rather than absorb it.
Why it matters for crypto
- A structural breakdown changes how rallies behave. Glassnode frames the loss of the True Market Mean (~$80.2K) as a decisive shift; until reclaimed, that level can act as resistance in their model.
- Spot demand is the make-or-break variable. The report’s key point is that spot volumes are still “structurally weak” even after the move from ~$98K to ~$72K, leaving the market vulnerable to sell-side continuation.
- Capitulation is building, but not “cycle low” confirmed. Realized losses are high (>$1.26B/day 7D average, with a spike >$2.4B), yet Glassnode notes stress levels aren’t necessarily at historical extremes associated with major dislocation events.
- Derivatives are amplifying volatility. The largest long liquidation spikes of the drawdown suggest forced deleveraging is driving flow — which can deepen moves and make rebounds unstable.
- Options pricing signals downside anxiety. Elevated short-dated implied vol (~70% near $73K), steep downside skew, and a negative short-term volatility risk premium all point to “protection-first” positioning.
What to watch next
- $80.2K (True Market Mean): does it cap rallies as resistance, or does BTC reclaim it and reset the tone?
- Demand zones at $70K–$80K and $66.9K–$70.6K: Glassnode highlights these as areas where newer buyers are accumulating and sell pressure may be absorbed. Watch whether price stabilizes around them or slices through.
- Realized loss intensity: the report flags >$1.26B/day (7D average) with spikes beyond $2.4B as stress markers that can coincide with seller exhaustion and temporary stabilization.
- Spot volume recovery: Glassnode is explicit that durable trend reversals historically coincide with aggressive spot volume expansion; without it, rallies may stay corrective.
- Options market temperature: if downside skew and front-end implied volatility stay elevated, it suggests traders are still paying up for protection — and price action may remain jumpy.
Source: Glassnode — “The Week On-chain: Bears In Control” (Feb. 4, 2026)