The post Bitcoin ETFs are 60% underwater, creating a $100 billion distressed house of cards appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Bitcoin is trading near $86,000The post Bitcoin ETFs are 60% underwater, creating a $100 billion distressed house of cards appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Bitcoin is trading near $86,000

Bitcoin ETFs are 60% underwater, creating a $100 billion distressed house of cards

Bitcoin is trading near $86,000 as losses build across ETFs, treasury companies, and miners.

According to Checkonchain’s Dec. 15 “System Stress” note, investors are carrying about $100 billion in unrealized losses.

Bitcoin system stress (Source: Checkonchain)

Miners are pulling back hashrate, many treasury-company stocks are trading below their Bitcoin book value, and about 60% of spot Bitcoin ETF inflows are underwater.

Checkonchain’s chart of ETF average inflow cost basis and ETF market value to realized value (MVRV) places the ETF cost basis and the True Market Mean in the same area, around $80,000–$82,000.

That puts a large share of institutional positioning near breakeven.

Those anchors matter because they connect price action to balance sheets rather than chart patterns.

When price sits on or below aggregate cost basis, realized losses can climb, and liquidity can thin as participants exit positions into bounces.

When that zone is shared by cohorts that had become key sources of demand in 2024 and 2025, the market is forced to determine whether institutional positioning serves as a cost-basis floor.

It can also flip into a downside trigger if that level breaks.

Glassnode sets a similar map

In its Week On-Chain report for week 49, Glassnode wrote that Bitcoin has been range-bound between the short-term holder cost basis near $102,700 and the True Market Mean near $81,300.

It framed $95,000 (the 0.75 cost-basis quantile) as an early reclaim level.

Bitwise also put the True Market Mean near $82,000 as a support reference.

It described a support channel from about $82,000 down to $75,000, tying that band to the IBIT cost basis near $81,000 and Strategy’s cost basis near $75,000.

Bitcoin ETF cost basis (Source: Bitwise)

Bitwise estimated unrealized losses at around $152 billion (about 6.6% of market cap) after a roughly 35% drawdown, bringing total losses to about $765 billion.

A stress feature is the amount of ETF capital between $75,000 and $85,000.

The aggregate spot Bitcoin ETF cost basis is around $80,000 under roughly $127 billion of capital.

However, only 2.9% of that capital sits in the $75,000–$85,000 band, leaving a thinner cushion if price slips below the central cluster.

Amberdata also described a denser “fortress” zone at $65,000–$70,000 that holds 15.2% of ETF capital.

That distribution can translate into faster downside moves if the market trades through the $75,000–$85,000 gap.

Loss realization is already elevated even when price rebounds

Glassnode put entity-adjusted realized loss (30-day simple moving average) near $555 million per day, the highest level since the FTX-era unwind.

It said this was occurring even as prices bounced from late-November lows into the low-$90,000s.

The same report placed the relative unrealized loss (30-day SMA) at around 4.4% after nearly two years, down from below 2%.

That aligns with Checkonchain’s view that the cycle has entered a stress regime.

ETFs remain central because they serve both as structural allocation rails and as a short-term liquidity valve.

According to Bitbo’s ETF tracker, U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs collectively held about 1,311,862 BTC (about $117.3 billion) as of Dec. 15.

BlackRock’s IBIT held about 778,052 BTC (about $69.6 billion) after recording mixed flows over the last two weeks, culminating in a modest $100 million net inflow.

That is a reminder that ETF demand can flip quickly during risk-off periods.

Mining economics add another pressure point because weaker revenue can translate into inventory sales or deferred investment.

In its November lookback, Luxor’s Hashrate Index reported that the USD hashprice averaged about $39.82, down 17.9% month over month.

It hit an all-time low near $35.06 on Nov. 22.

Bitcoin hashprice index (Source: Luxor)

Luxor said forward curves for December 2025 through April 2026 fell about 16–18% in USD terms.

Checkonchain also wrote that miners are pulling back hashrate.

That keeps attention on whether the sector is approaching a capitulation-style flush or a longer margin-compression phase.

The third cohort, Bitcoin-treasury equities, is facing a funding constraint at the same time.

Reuters reported that Bitcoin treasury companies bought about $50 billion of Bitcoin over the past year, but many are now trading at a discount to their net asset value.

That reduces the advantage of issuing equity to buy more Bitcoin.

When those shares are below the value of the underlying holdings, the “issue equity, buy BTC” flywheel becomes harder to run at scale.

Macro linkage has become the amplifier

Reuters cited LSEG data showing Bitcoin’s average correlation to the S&P 500 near 0.5 in 2025 versus about 0.29 in 2024.

It also cited a correlation with the Nasdaq 100 near 0.52, versus about 0.23, tying many drawdowns to equity risk regimes rather than crypto-only catalysts.

Bitcoin price swings (Source: LSEG/Reuters)

Rates matter in that setup because they set the tone for risk appetite. Bank of America expects two more cuts in June and July 2026.

That keeps the 2026 rate path near the center of the debate over risk assets.

Taken together, that causal stack is why Checkonchain calls the current setup the most negative since 2022.

Underwater capital is concentrated in cohorts with balance sheets that are sensitive to price; the reflexive buyer base has less funding flexibility; miner margins are compressed into early 2026; and Bitcoin’s link to risk assets is tighter than it was last year.

For readers trying to translate that into a forward-looking framework without turning it into trading advice, the stress can be tracked through measurable gauges.

Level (approx.)What it represents
$81k–$82kTrue Market Mean and ETF inflow cost-basis cluster
$95k0.75 cost-basis quantile (reclaim marker)
$102.7kShort-term holder cost basis
$75kLower bound in Bitwise support channel (MSTR cost basis reference)
$65k–$70kHeavier ETF capital concentration

On-chain, the first step is to determine whether realized-loss measures roll over from current levels as price stops printing new lows near the True Market Mean.

In flows, the question is whether large outflow days remain frequent or give way to steadier net behavior.

In mining, the watch point is whether hashprice and the forward curve stabilize into early 2026, or whether margin stress deepens and forces more operational retrenchment.

The next balance-sheet test remains the $80,000–$82,000 cost-basis band.

Mentioned in this article

Source: https://cryptoslate.com/bitcoin-etfs-are-60-underwater-creating-a-100-billion-stress-regime-that-hasnt-been-seen-since-ftx/

Piyasa Fırsatı
Housecoin Logosu
Housecoin Fiyatı(HOUSE)
$0.001878
$0.001878$0.001878
-5.05%
USD
Housecoin (HOUSE) Canlı Fiyat Grafiği
Sorumluluk Reddi: Bu sitede yeniden yayınlanan makaleler, halka açık platformlardan alınmıştır ve yalnızca bilgilendirme amaçlıdır. MEXC'nin görüşlerini yansıtmayabilir. Tüm hakları telif sahiplerine aittir. Herhangi bir içeriğin üçüncü taraf haklarını ihlal ettiğini düşünüyorsanız, kaldırılması için lütfen service@support.mexc.com ile iletişime geçin. MEXC, içeriğin doğruluğu, eksiksizliği veya güncelliği konusunda hiçbir garanti vermez ve sağlanan bilgilere dayalı olarak alınan herhangi bir eylemden sorumlu değildir. İçerik, finansal, yasal veya diğer profesyonel tavsiye niteliğinde değildir ve MEXC tarafından bir tavsiye veya onay olarak değerlendirilmemelidir.

Ayrıca Şunları da Beğenebilirsiniz

What We Know (and Don’t) About Modern Code Reviews

What We Know (and Don’t) About Modern Code Reviews

This article traces the evolution of modern code review from formal inspections to tool-driven workflows, maps key research themes, and highlights a critical gap
Paylaş
Hackernoon2025/12/17 17:00
X claims the right to share your private AI chats with everyone under new rules – no opt out

X claims the right to share your private AI chats with everyone under new rules – no opt out

X says its Terms of Service will change Jan. 15, 2026, expanding how the platform defines user “Content” and adding contract language tied to the operation and
Paylaş
CryptoSlate2025/12/17 19:24
Michael Saylor Pushes Digital Capital Narrative At Bitcoin Treasuries Unconference

Michael Saylor Pushes Digital Capital Narrative At Bitcoin Treasuries Unconference

The post Michael Saylor Pushes Digital Capital Narrative At Bitcoin Treasuries Unconference appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. The suitcoiners are in town.  From a low-key, circular podium in the middle of a lavish New York City event hall, Strategy executive chairman Michael Saylor took the mic and opened the Bitcoin Treasuries Unconference event. He joked awkwardly about the orange ties, dresses, caps and other merch to the (mostly male) audience of who’s-who in the bitcoin treasury company world.  Once he got onto the regular beat, it was much of the same: calm and relaxed, speaking freely and with confidence, his keynote was heavy on the metaphors and larger historical stories. Treasury companies are like Rockefeller’s Standard Oil in its early years, Michael Saylor said: We’ve just discovered crude oil and now we’re making sense of the myriad ways in which we can use it — the automobile revolution and jet fuel is still well ahead of us.  Established, trillion-dollar companies not using AI because of “security concerns” make them slow and stupid — just like companies and individuals rejecting digital assets now make them poor and weak.  “I’d like to think that we understood our business five years ago; we didn’t.”  We went from a defensive investment into bitcoin, Saylor said, to opportunistic, to strategic, and finally transformational; “only then did we realize that we were different.” Michael Saylor: You Come Into My Financial History House?! Jokes aside, Michael Saylor is very welcome to the warm waters of our financial past. He acquitted himself honorably by invoking the British Consol — though mispronouncing it, and misdating it to the 1780s; Pelham’s consolidation of debts happened in the 1750s and perpetual government debt existed well before then — and comparing it to the gold standard and the future of bitcoin. He’s right that Strategy’s STRC product in many ways imitates the consols; irredeemable, perpetual debt, issued at par, with…
Paylaş
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/09/18 02:12