200 Week Moving Average Heatmap
$48,444.86 +0.09%
Bitcoin vs Global M2 Growth
+7.621% -0.65%
Bitcoin vs US M2 Growth
+0.7173% +0.00%
MVRV Z Score
2.64 -0.40%
Bitcoin Dominance
63.2% +0.07%
Fear and Greed Index
71 -1.39%
Mayer Multiple
1.14 -1.72%
US vs Offshore Trading Volume
6.92%
Circulating Supply
19,877,831.25 +0.00%
Halving Countdown
29.0%
Hashrate vs Price
883.93 EH/s -15.24%
Node Map
21,768
Difficulty Estimator
79,679,234,551,296 +0.00%
Miner Revenue
$48,072,174.35 -16.30%
Network Difficulty
126.98T +0.00%
Puell Multiple
1.26 -16.41%
Exchange Trading Volume
$49.98B -11.90%
Exchange Trading Volume BTC
$10.91B -13.85%
Exchange Volume BTC Dominance
21.8% -2.20%
Monthly Exchange Volume
$472.45B
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Terminal Price stats
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Terminal Stats
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The Bitcoin Terminal Price is calculated by multiplying Bitcoin’s Transferred Price by 21. Transferred Price itself is derived from dividing the sum of Coin Days Destroyed (CDD) by the current circulating supply. CDD quantifies how long Bitcoin has remained dormant before moving on-chain, offering a window into investor behavior, particularly long-term holders. Created by James Check, also known as @Checkmatey, the Terminal Price reflects the culmination of value transacted on-chain, weighted by time, and becomes most relevant near cyclical tops.
Bitcoin’s price has intersected with the Terminal Price at key moments in past cycles. In 2017 and again during the April 2021 peak, Bitcoin nearly or fully touched the Terminal Price level. However, the November 2021 all-time high of ~$69,000 failed to reach it, highlighting a potential shift in market dynamics or diminishing speculative momentum. While not every peak hits the Terminal Price precisely, historical proximity to this level has proven to be a reliable zone for overheated markets and potential profit-taking. Its counterpart, the Balanced Price, plays a similar role in identifying macro bottoms.
Recent cycles suggest that Bitcoin’s ability to reach or exceed the Terminal Price may be weakening over time. This aligns with broader themes of declining volatility and maturing market behavior. Still, the Terminal Price remains a critical reference point. Rather than a rigid ceiling, it serves as a dynamic valuation band that helps traders and long-term investors assess where Bitcoin sits relative to prior euphoric peaks. The consistent interaction with this level across multiple cycles reaffirms its relevance as a psychological and on-chain resistance.