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Crypto News: Long-Term Holders Now Control 78% of Bitcoin Supply — August Will Reveal Whether February's Sub-$60,000 Dip Created Real Demand

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2026-07-03 12:55:37
Long-term holders currently hold approximately 15.6 million BTC — roughly 78% of Bitcoin's circulating supply — and the percentage continues to rise, according to analyst Darkfost. The headline figure looks constructive. The mechanism behind it requires more careful interpretation. The current increase in LTH holdings is not primarily driven by new accumulation at current prices. It reflects coins purchased approximately six months ago near $90,000 crossing the 180-day threshold that defines long-term holder status under the UTXO model. August will be the first window in which the market can observe whether the more meaningful demand signal — Bitcoin's dip below $60,000 in February — actually stimulated genuine new buying that is now maturing into long-term holder status.
The UTXO Mechanic Behind the Rising LTH Figure
The long-term holder metric is defined by a specific UTXO rule: Bitcoin must remain unspent for at least 180 days before the address holding it is classified as a long-term holder. This means the metric is not a real-time measure of accumulation sentiment — it is a lagging indicator that reflects what buyers did six months ago, not what they are doing today.
The current rise in LTH supply to 15.6 million BTC corresponds to BTC purchased when prices were near $90,000 in approximately late December 2025 and January 2026. Those buyers — who are now underwater by approximately 30% on their positions — have held through the entire first-half correction without selling, which is why their coins have crossed the 180-day threshold and are now classified as long-term holdings. The rising LTH figure does not indicate these holders are adding to their positions. It indicates that the amount of BTC in LTH status is higher than the amount that long-term holders are selling — a necessary but not sufficient condition for the supply tightening narrative.
The Historical Context — 16.8 Million BTC in December 2023
In December 2023, LTH supply peaked at approximately 16.8 million BTC — a figure that has since declined as long-term holders conducted large-scale distributions at several peaks in the current cycle. Bitcoin's rise from approximately $40,000 in late 2023 to the $126,000 October 2025 all-time high was accompanied by sustained LTH distribution — the historical pattern in which long-term holders sell into bull market strength, transferring coins to new buyers who become the next cycle's long-term holders.
The current cycle is following this historical pattern precisely. LTH supply peaked above 16.8 million BTC, declined through the distribution phase as prices rose, and is now rebuilding as the correction has converted recent buyers into long-term holders. The question is whether the rebuilding reflects genuine demand accumulation at cycle-low prices or simply the aging of coins bought near the top.
August as the Key Observation Window
Darkfost identifies August as the critical window for answering that question. If the LTH figure continues to rise significantly in August, it will reflect coins bought during February's period when Bitcoin fell below $60,000 entering the long-term holder cohort — those coins are now approaching their six-month maturity threshold and will begin crossing it in August. A sustained increase in LTH holdings through August would therefore indicate that the sub-$60,000 February dip genuinely stimulated new demand from buyers who have since held through volatility rather than selling into the partial recovery.
If the LTH figure plateaus or declines in August despite the February dip having been a potential accumulation moment, it would suggest that the demand signal from lower prices was weaker than the supply metrics imply — that buyers at $60,000 in February were fewer in number or smaller in position size than the bottoming-signal frameworks have assumed.
The Distribution Phase Caveat
Darkfost's historical framing adds an important structural note. In prior cycles, the period from the end of the bear market to the first peak of the bull market was characterized by rapidly rising LTH holdings — exactly the pattern now visible. But that rising LTH phase was followed by the distribution phase in which long-term holders systematically transferred coins to the market as prices climbed, creating the selling pressure that eventually ended each bull market.
The current elevated LTH share of 78% is therefore consistent with both a bottoming thesis — long-term holders accumulating before the next bull market — and a pre-distribution setup — long-term holders holding high concentrations before reducing exposure into strength. Which interpretation is correct will depend on whether August's LTH data confirms genuine new demand from February buyers, and whether the macro environment that drove the correction provides the sustained improvement needed to convert the structural accumulation into price recovery.
Disclaimer:
1. The information provided does not constitute investment advice. Investors should make independent decisions and bear all risks themselves.
2. The copyright of this content belongs to the original author. The views expressed herein are solely those of the author and do not represent the stance or position of this website.
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