The argument of the coin being undervalued could be evidenced by the chart below which depicted a reading below 0.5. This signaled that the value of the newly issued coins on a daily basis was quite low when compared to historical standards especially during the time period of the rally.
While Bitcoin is undervalued and might not be in substantial bullish territory, at the time of writing, it slipped below $10,000 and settled in the range of $9,500, it was, however, macro bullish, according to its ‘cost-basis’ metric. Nearly three years ago, Bitcoin reached close to the levels of $20,000, its ATH during the massive crypto rally. At this level, not many transactions really happened.
Explaining the ‘cost-basis’ metric, Messari’s Research Analyst Ryan Watkins tweeted,
“Cost basis refers to the original price that an asset was acquired. Estimated cost basis is calculated by dividing a cryptoassets realized capitalization (realized cap) by its current supply. The metric is meant to present realized cap in a more familiar, “per coin” format. It is calculated by valuing each unit of supply at the price it last moved on-chain. Realized cap can be thought of as an estimation of the aggregate cost basis of a cryptoasset.”
Most Bitcoins were traded well below this region. Hence, its cost basis sits at around $6,000. According to the data, the investor perspective on the coin has generally been bullish meaning that the majority of the Bitcoin investors are on the profit side. Bitcoin is trading at less than half its ATH price.
However, this was not the case with XRP. In terms of the fourth-largest cryptocurrency, despite XRP having only closed above $1.00 on just 2.1% of its trading days, Watkins said that the coin’s aggregate estimated cost basis is $1.38. This essentially implied that, unlike Bitcoin, most of XRP investors were in “red”.
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