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The current market landscape for Bitcoin remains largely bearish following a net 2.41% loss over the past week. While Bitcoin is stabilizing around $68,000, it is still about 46% below its all-time high of $126,100 recorded in late 2025.
In a QuickTake post on the CryptoQuant platform, a pseudonymous analyst, MorenoDV, discussed how the Stablecoin Supply Ratio (SSR) can function as a liquidity signal for Bitcoin. The analyst pointed to the current SSR level around 9.5–9.6 as particularly important.
SSR measures Bitcoin’s market cap relative to stablecoin supply—effectively indicating how much “dry powder” (buying power) exists in the market. In general terms, a higher SSR implies Bitcoin’s market cap is large relative to stablecoins, suggesting less sidelined buying power. A lower SSR implies stablecoin supply is relatively strong versus Bitcoin, indicating more potential buying power.
MorenoDV said the SSR is not a simple bullish or bearish indicator on its own; its interpretation depends on how the ratio approaches the 9.5 level.
The analyst described 9.5 as a “liquidity equilibrium zone” that can act as either support or resistance depending on market approach. Traders are expected to watch whether stablecoin inflows remain steady at this level, or whether liquidity exhaustion is developing—potentially indicated by rejection at the equilibrium zone.
As of writing, Bitcoin is trading at approximately $68,840, up 3.97% over the past 24 hours. Daily trading volume is down 15.3% to $37.33 billion.
Coincodex data shows the Fear and Greed index at 9, indicating extreme caution among investors.
Coincodex analysts and investors expect a more bullish trajectory over the near term, with projections including:
The projections also suggest some retracement after an initial surge, consistent with a classic ascending pattern.
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