Bitcoin’s price is barely moving, but the composition of its holder base is undergoing a quiet transformation that could define how the current cycle plays out. In the on-chain update shared by CryptoQuant CEO Ki Young Ju, one metric stands out: the 6-month to 2-year cohort now controls 53% of Bitcoin’s realized cap. Two years ago, that figure was just 15%. The shift is not subtle—it’s a structural rebalancing that puts a lot more of the market’s cost basis in the hands of buyers who have weathered months of chop and held.
Realized cap tracks the value of each coin based on its last on-chain movement price, effectively measuring the aggregate cost basis of the network. When a single age cohort absorbs so much of that value, it signals that a large swath of market participants aren’t just trading—they’re accumulating and sitting. The 6m–2y band is particularly useful because it filters out short-term speculators without becoming too stale. These are holders who likely entered the market post-halving or during the sideways grind of 2025, choosing to not take quick exits.
The on-chain update notes that the last cycle’s Bitcoin bottom arrived when this cohort’s realized cap share peaked around 68%. That doesn’t guarantee a repeat, but the trajectory matters. A rising share among mid-term holders often coincides with weak hands getting shaken out and more resilient capital taking their place. As short-term holders evolve into longer-term hodlers, the amount of supply that moves easily on rallies or dips shrinks. That can compress volatility, even when macro conditions are noisy.
What remains uncertain is how this cohort will behave once real momentum returns. If Bitcoin climbs toward previous highs, the temptation to realize gains could trigger a wave of distribution that derails the nascent floor. The flip side is that a 53% reading still leaves room for further accumulation before hitting the saturation level seen at prior bottoms. In that sense, the market may still be in a building phase rather than a final one. Blockchain developer activity across leading networks continues to grow, reflecting a broader infrastructure buildout that often runs parallel to these shifts in holder behavior.

