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19,810,321.875 +0.00%
Fear and Greed Index
70 +11.11%
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97.0 +32.88%
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20,595
Bitcoin Dominance
57.1% -0.67%
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1.31 +2.34%
US vs Offshore Trading Volume
8.17%
Halving Countdown
18.7%
Hashrate vs Price
845.61 EH/s +20.32%
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79,679,234,551,296 +0.00%
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$47,089,285.01 +22.18%
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110.45T +0.00%
Puell Multiple
1.17 +22.08%
Exchange Trading Volume
$61.72B -32.88%
Exchange Trading Volume BTC
$20.68B -30.99%
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33.5% +2.82%
Monthly Exchange Volume
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Net Unrealized Profit/Loss Chat
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Net Unrealized Profit/Loss stats
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Terminal Stats
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The Net Unrealized Profit and Loss (NUPL) metric is a significant tool in bitcoin analysis, providing valuable insights into the market's overall sentiment and potential future movements. It serves as an aggregate cyclical oscillator, tracking the amount of paper gains or losses within the market.
To understand NUPL, it is essential to first understand the concept of unrealized profit and loss. When a UTXO (unspent transaction output) is created on the blockchain, it signifies the movement of a coin, establishing a purchase price or cost of acquisition for that coin. By comparing this purchase price to the coin's current market price, we can determine the unrealized profit or loss. An unrealized profit occurs when the current price exceeds the purchase price, whereas an unrealized loss occurs when the current price is lower.
The NUPL metric aggregates the unrealized profits and losses of all UTXOs in the bitcoin network. It normalizes this aggregate value against the market capitalization, providing a proportionate measure of how much profit or loss exists within the overall market. This proportion helps in correlating NUPL to the cyclical and fractal behavior of market structures, market cycles, and investor sentiment.
The formula for NUPL is essentially the difference between the market cap (the spot value of the network) and the realized cap (the stored value of the network), divided by the market cap.
NUPL is Relative Unrealized Profit − Relative Unrealized Loss NUPL = Market Cap − Realized Cap / Market Cap
This normalization presents the metric as a fraction of the overall market cap, tracking the aggregate paper profits or losses within the system. By examining past market fractals and historical events, analysts can use NUPL to gain insights into market sentiment and potential future trends, such as bullish markets, bearish markets, or transitional phases like capitulation or blow-off tops.
NUPL is instrumental in identifying various phases of market sentiment. Positive NUPL values indicate unrealized profits across the board, often associated with euphoria, greed, and an increasing incentive to sell. High NUPL values suggest that the market is moving into a euphoric blow-off top region. Conversely, negative NUPL values indicate that the market is below its cost basis, holding unrealized losses, symbolized by fear, stress, and eventual capitulation at the bottom of bearish markets.
By tracking the cyclical oscillator, NUPL highlights peaks during euphoric bull runs and steep declines during capitulation points at the bottom of bear markets. The metric's color grading scale, mapped to human emotions and sentiment across market cycles, further aids in visualizing these phases. For instance, during bear market bottoms, severely negative NUPL values indicate maximum market capitulation, where a significant portion of the market is underwater. As the market trends through phases of hope, optimism, and belief, positive NUPL values indicate growing unrealized profits.
Several variants of the NUPL metric provide more detailed insights into specific market segments:
By analyzing the NUPL metric, investors and analysts can gain insights into the distribution of supply within the bitcoin market. For example, when a large portion of the market has accumulated coins within a specific price range, any price movement above or below that range will result in significant unrealized gains or losses. This helps identify concentrations of supply at certain price nodes, providing valuable information about potential support and resistance levels.
The NUPL metric also aids in understanding macro cycles. For instance, during the 2018 capitulation event, the NUPL metric fell to extremely low levels, indicating that a large proportion of the market was holding unrealized losses. This suggested that the majority of the market had a cost basis higher than the current price, leading to significant capitulation. By examining such events, analysts can better predict future market movements and investor behavior during similar macro cycles.