WikiBit 2025-11-26 01:13The percentage of BTC, ETH and SOL held at a loss is shockingly high, but probably nothing to worry about when staking, ETF positions, DAT reserves and lost coins are accounted for.
One analyst found that 40% of Bitcoin is held at a loss, while ETH and SOL data currently stand at 40% and 75% respectively. Should investors be worried?
Recent data from Glassnode showed Bitcoin (BTC), Ether (ETH), and Solana (SOL) reflecting record high levels of their supply held at a loss.
However, a closer examination of the locked supply, institutional holdings, and staking structures revealed that the effective liquid supply under pressure is significantly lower than the implied percentages, especially for Ether and Solana.
Key takeaways:
Positions at a loss do not reflect the actual liquid supply
Bitcoin currently has 35% of its supply held at a loss, a level last seen when BTC traded near $27,000. However, even without a staking mechanism, Bitcoins liquid supply is far lower than the numbers suggest. The key statistics are outlined below:
Bitcoin's percentage of supply in profit is in a sharp decline. Source: Glassnode
Combined, these factors remove roughly 33% of all Bitcoin from liquid circulation. Institutional holdings, particularly ETF treasuries and corporate treasuries, are not sensitive to short-term volatility, as they operate under mandates tied to reserves, long-horizon accumulation, or index tracking. The lost BTC further reduced the supply that can react to loss-driven pressure.
Ether figures required a more nuanced interpretation. While 37% of ETH is currently held at a loss, a substantial portion of the networks supply is locked or institutionally held:
Total ETH staked. Source: CryptoQuant
In total, over 40% of all ETH is effectively locked in staking, ETFs, or long-term institutional reserves. These categories historically do not react to short-term volatility, as institutional products (ETFs, custodial reserves) operate under policies prioritizing long-term accumulation rather than discretionary selling. As a result, the actual liquid ETH supply facing loss-driven pressure is materially smaller than the aforomentioned 37%.
Solana displayed an even sharper divergence. Although 70% of circulating SOL is held at a loss, the network has one of the highest staking ratios among major chains:
Lowest SOL supply in profit in two years. Source: Glassnode
This meant more than three-quarters of all SOL is locked in validator staking or institutional products, neither of which exhibits rapid selling behaviors. Notably, when SOL fell to $121, the supply held at a loss narrowed to 80%, a level it previously reached when the price was near $20, illustrating the metrics sensitivity to rapid price repricing rather than structural capitulation.
Interestingly, both ETH and SOLs supply-at-loss metrics tend to fall sharply during uptrends due to their heavy staking locks, making such spikes more reflective of price velocity than panic positioning.
Overall, across all three assets, the raw loss percentages overstate potential sell pressure. Once locked supply, institutional holdings, and permanently lost coins are accounted for, the true liquid supply at risk is significantly more contained.
Related: Bitcoin data calls $80K the bottom as analysts say BTC bulls are back
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