Glassnode's RHODL Ratio Suggests Bitcoin May Have Hit Bottom
A crucial on-chain metric, the RHODL ratio by Glassnode, which tracks the balance between long-term and short-term bitcoin holders, is signaling a potential market bottom rather than a cycle top, having reached a ratio of 4.5. Currently at its third-highest level on record, this indicator reveals that wealth is increasingly concentrated in older coins, as younger and more speculative holdings have been largely eliminated during the 50% correction in bitcoin over the past six months. The ratio compares the value of coins held by longer-term investors, typically those holding for six months to three years, against coins held by short-term participants, defined as one day to three months. By measuring this balance, it provides insight into whether the market is dominated by seasoned holders or fresh demand from new entrants. A rising ratio often reflects coins aging and a decline in speculative activity, rather than an influx of new buyers, a dynamic that typically emerges after sharp corrections, as seen in 2015, 2019, and 2022. There have been two instances where the RHODL ratio has been higher than its current level, in 2015 with a ratio of 5 and in 2022 with a ratio of 7, both of which marked cycle lows, suggesting there could be further downside for bitcoin. However, reaching even higher levels typically requires a deeper collapse in short-term holder activity and near-complete demand exhaustion, conditions that are less apparent today, given the 25% price recovery from the February lows, negative perpetual funding rates, and the broader macro risk environment, which has seen the S&P 500 hit new all-time highs.