Bitcoin hovers in limbo between strong onchain support and derivatives market pressure
Bitcoin remains tightly aligned with the 2026 realized price of roughly $76,200, according to Checkonchain, with spot trading recently holding near $76,528 since early April.
The realized price reflects the average onchain cost basis of coins last moved within a given year, effectively capturing the aggregate entry price of that cohort of holders. Increasingly, market participants treat this level as a more meaningful reference for support and resistance than traditional technical indicators.
Earlier in the year, Bitcoin’s decline toward $60,000 in February found support near the 2023 realized price, reinforcing the importance of cohort-based cost-basis levels in shaping broader market structure.
Over the weekend, Bitcoin briefly dipped to $74,500 before rebounding from its 128-day moving average, a widely tracked technical trend indicator.
At current levels, Bitcoin is trading just below two key onchain valuation bands clustered around $77,000: the true market mean and the short-term holder cost basis. Both are closely watched as signals of sentiment and short-term positioning pressure.
Derivatives positioning is also contributing to the tight trading range. The largest call interest is concentrated at the $80,000 strike, with roughly $600 million in open interest, while the largest put cluster sits at $75,000 with about $377 million. This positioning can incentivize market makers to keep prices within a defined range ahead of expiry, reinforcing subdued volatility.
On-chain data from Glassnode further shows that more than 15% of circulating Bitcoin supply has been accumulated between $74,000 and $83,000. This dense concentration of cost basis levels highlights how compressed recent trading activity has become, with significant supply anchored around current price zones.
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