The Accumulation Trend Score, while useful for tracking overall onchain balance changes, is limited by its bias towards larger entities and lack of granular cost-basis insights.
The Cost Basis Distribution (CBD) Heatmap provides a more nuanced view, revealing significant supply concentration in the $95k-$98k range during mid-December to late February. This "buy the dip" behavior indicates investors remained confident in the bull trend, viewing pullbacks as temporary pauses before anticipated price increases. #DOGE Official Reserve Plan #Solana ETF Application #PARTI Listing Campaign The Accumulation Trend Score, while useful for tracking overall onchain balance changes, is limited by its bias towards larger entities and lack of granular cost-basis insights. The Cost Basis Distribution (CBD) Heatmap provides a more nuanced view, revealing significant supply concentration in the $95k-$98k range during mid-December to late February. This "buy the dip" behavior indicates investors remained confident in the bull trend, viewing pullbacks as temporary pauses before anticipated price increases.
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The Accumulation Trend Score, while useful for tracking overall onchain balance changes, is limited by its bias towards larger entities and lack of granular cost-basis insights.
The Cost Basis Distribution (CBD) Heatmap provides a more nuanced view, revealing significant supply concentration in the $95k-$98k range during mid-December to late February. This "buy the dip" behavior indicates investors remained confident in the bull trend, viewing pullbacks as temporary pauses before anticipated price increases.
#DOGE Official Reserve Plan #Solana ETF Application #PARTI Listing Campaign
The Accumulation Trend Score, while useful for tracking overall onchain balance changes, is limited by its bias towards larger entities and lack of granular cost-basis insights.
The Cost Basis Distribution (CBD) Heatmap provides a more nuanced view, revealing significant supply concentration in the $95k-$98k range during mid-December to late February. This "buy the dip" behavior indicates investors remained confident in the bull trend, viewing pullbacks as temporary pauses before anticipated price increases.