It may be a tempting sell at 3x gains, but last November’s buyers remain determined to “hodl.”
Bitcoin (BTC) investors who bought at 2017 all-time highs and above have still not sold, data suggests.
According to the Hodl Waves metric, coins that last moved in the past six to 12 months now make up the biggest portion of the BTC supply.
BTC buyers hold their nerve
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Despite strong gains and equally strong corrections in 2021, those who entered the market or added to their positions in or after November 2020 are refusing to sell.
Hodl Waves, which tracks the age distribution of unspent transaction outputs (UTXO), show that the supply controlled by those six-to-12-month “hodlers” has increased — from 8.7% at the start of June to 21.4% as of Nov. 17.
At the same time, coins held for multiple years have decreased only slightly, highlighting that modest selling has taken place and that, with the exception of the six-to-12-month group, investors’ resolve remains steadfast.
The data underscores the theory that few BTC owners intend to sell at current prices, even as these circle all-time highs.
As Cointelegraph reported, however, distribution of coins by long-term holders — a classic characteristic of bull market peak phases — has now begun. The last time this occurred was also in November last year.
Bull market “still has a ways to go”
Meanwhile, further numbers tracking “older” BTC also hints that Bitcoin’s oldest hands will continue to sit tight.
Related: Bitcoin bargain: 3rd-biggest whale address adds 207 BTC at $62K
As noted by on-chain analyst William Clemente this week, dormancy flow — Bitcoin’s market capitalization divided by annualized dormancy — remains low near BTC/USD all-time highs.
High dormancy, Clemente explained, indicates older coins being spent.
“Seeing dormancy flow currently so low means older coins remain relatively dormant,” he added in Twitter comments Wednesday.
“This Bitcoin bull market still has a ways to go according to the metric.”
Source: cointelegraph.com