Bitcoin's CVDD Hits 0.3 — Historic "Floor Detector" Whispers "Bottom" 🪙
Bitcoin [BTC] traded along its 200-week simple moving average on the weekly timeframe, a level that previously acted as support and powered earlier rallies. The last time $BTC dropped to that line, it consolidated along it between July 2022 and October 2023, a stretch followed by a rise from $27,112 to approximately $73,777. At the time of writing, the asset was moving in the $60,000–$64,000 range seen over the past weeks, with no indication of directional break.
Cumulative Value Days Destroyed (CVDD) — a metric weighing destroyed coin days across Bitcoin's history against current market value — printed a reading of 0.3, dipping into an extremely low region. CryptoQuant data showed levels like this have marked price tops and bottoms on several occasions, notably in 2019 and 2022, where price plunged to that zone before a major rebound carried the asset toward a new high. Liquidity outflows that began in October 2025 had wiped $1.04 trillion from the market at presstime.
The accumulation/distribution indicator pointed to ongoing buying pressure, with 17.11 million in Bitcoin volume. Spot netflow across centralized exchanges over the past seven days showed a net buy, with around $234.75 million in buy netflow, pushing total Bitcoin purchases over the same stretch to $9.36 billion. If a rally similar to 2023 unfolds, $BTC stands a chance of climbing 76% to a high of roughly $108,636 on the chart.
The U.S. spot ETF market told a more bearish story, with total netflow leaning toward selling. Investors there recorded a sell netflow of roughly $226.84 million, confirming that seller dominance persists.
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