Bitcoin’s on-chain “spent profit” signals are flashing a familiar pattern associated with past bear-market turning points, according to CryptoQuant analysis shared over the weekend.
Analyst known as Darkfost said the ratio of Bitcoin unspent transaction outputs (UTXOs) spent at a loss versus those spent in profit has dropped to the lowest level in this bear-market cycle, a move that typically reflects broader capitulation among holders rather than a single wave of short-term selling.
Darkfost’s core claim is rooted in how Bitcoin’s UTXOs are “spent”—specifically whether the outputs being moved on-chain were created when the coins were worth more or less than where they are being spent now.
According to Darkfost, the number of UTXOs spent in profit relative to those spent at a loss has fallen to its lowest level this cycle. He said this is the first time the metric has triggered since the beginning of the current correction, suggesting the market is shifting into a more mature phase of capitulation.
In his view, the resulting configuration points to a bottoming process rather than an immediate, clean reversal. He also stressed that such periods typically unfold over a “long timeframe,” warning that investors should expect continued stress even after the signal fires.
The same style of signal has historically been associated with bear-market lows. Darkfost noted that the last time the ratio dropped to comparable levels was during the previous bear-market depths in mid-2023, when BTC prices fell to roughly $26,000.
DurdenBTC—another analyst who referenced the UTXO ratio—said the reading has “caught every cycle low since 2016.” At the same time, he cautioned that price action can remain rough even after the charted bottom signal appears: in his words, it can “still feel terrible for weeks,” and buying may not look comfortable immediately because the indicator exists precisely when selling pressure is at its most intense.
Darkfost reiterated the conclusion in a separate post, saying long-term holders are starting to move into a “capitulation phase.” He connected this to SOPR (Spent Output Profit Ratio) behavior for that cohort, noting that it is increasingly moving into negative territory—an on-chain condition often interpreted as realized losses for the group spending older coins.
However, the analyst also underscored that not all price weakness has the same source. He said the correction has been driven largely by a rapid increase in BTC inflows to exchanges from short-term holders. That matters because exchange inflows can increase the probability of near-term selling pressure, even if broader capitulation signals suggest longer-term investors are beginning to absorb supply.
Swissblock added a complementary view on the structure of the decline, stating that Bitcoin has likely moved beyond the initial breakdown, but that the market is still in a “base formation phase.” In other words, a stabilization phase can arrive before a clear trend reversal, and momentum may remain subdued while the market works through its supply/demand imbalance.
While on-chain readings can help frame the longer arc of the cycle, immediate sentiment can still be heavily influenced by outside developments. The article’s outlook flagged potential uncertainty and increased selling pressure following resumed strikes by the US military on Iranian targets over the weekend.
According to Central Command, US fighter jets struck 10 Iranian military targets at multiple locations in and near the Strait of Hormuz late on Saturday, following an Iranian drone attack on a commercial ship. At the time of writing, BTC dipped to around $59,800 in early trading on Sunday morning before recovering the $60,100 level.
For traders and short-horizon investors, the takeaway is that even if capitulation signals are flashing, the path to a durable bottom can be uneven—especially when geopolitical headlines reintroduce risk-off behavior.
Going forward, readers should watch whether exchange inflows from short-term holders continue to rise or start to cool, and whether broader holder loss signals persist or transition toward recovery—because those are the data points that will determine whether “bottoming” evolves into a sustained trend shift rather than a brief stabilization.
This article was originally published as Bitcoin UTXO Data Points to Ongoing Capitulation, Analyst Says on Crypto Breaking News – your trusted source for crypto news, Bitcoin news, and blockchain updates.

