The analyst also stressed why the current May 2026 is so pivotal. “On one hand, the indicator is showing the first constructive regime shift in years,” he said. “Bitcoin is no longer behaving like a deep bear-market asset, and the recovery in the 30-day moving average suggests improving momentum beneath the surface.”

Currently, Bitcoin finds itself in a tug of war similar to 2022. While the onchain metrics are healing, the asset is struggling to decisively flip the $82,000 resistance level, a ceiling that has held firm despite multiple breakthrough attempts this month following a 35% rebound from February’s $60,000 lows.

To confirm this bullish signal, bitcoin must overcome the “exhaustion” presently visible in secondary metrics, Moreno suggested. Unlike the clean early-cycle entries of the past this move is clashing with a neutral Fear & Greed index and a complex macroeconomic backdrop.

While Arthur Hayes, chief investment officer of Maelstrom, did not mention CryptoQuant’s indicator, he echoed the sentiment that the cycle has shifted, stating he believes Bitcoin already found its bottom at $60,000 earlier this year. Hayes, who also co-founded the BitMEX exchange, pointed to $90,000 as the level at which the rally would turn explosive and head toward its previous high of $126,000.

Jason Fernandes, co-founder at AdLunam, concluded that while these indicators are useful, they are often misunderstood. “Metrics like MVRV (Market cap versus realized cap) or NUPL (net unrealized profit and loss) were never designed to be precise trading signals,” he said. “They are better viewed as behavioral frameworks for understanding where Bitcoin sits within a broader liquidity cycle.”

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