For context, the model estimates Bitcoin’s fundamental production costs by measuring the electricity required to mine new BTC. Because mining operations tend to consume substantial amounts of energy, the metric is often used as a proxy for Bitcoin’s inherent value. This is because it represents the minimum price at which miners can sustainably operate over the long term.
In line with historical data, Pillows explained that Bitcoin bear markets have never fallen below this Electrical Cost, despite the severe drawdowns seen during these periods. On the contrary, bear markets have often found bottoms near this crucial price level.
However, Pillows highlighted a caveat in this analysis, stating that it would take an extraordinary global event for this support zone to be broken. In the event that the world is hit by a recession or a pandemic as severe as COVID, the Bitcoin price could temporarily fall below its estimated production cost due to panic-driven sales.
Silent BTC Accumulation On Binance Underway As Outflows Steadily ClimbThe analyst noted that technical indicators — notably, the RSI (14) and the EMA50/200 — are telling a clearly bearish story. RSI readings, for example, have fallen to extreme levels near 6.4, and the EMA50/200 currently displays a “Death Cross” pattern.
At the same time, Binance’s Exchange Netflows reads as negative (-0.58σ), indicating that Bitcoin is leaving Binance consistently—an event that further suggests its holders are accumulating BTC rather than simply panic-selling. But then CryptoOnchain explained that the unignorable threat of a long squeeze still looms, given the high Open Interest.
As of this writing, the price of BTC stands at around $602,388, reflecting an almost 3% jump in the past 24 hours.




















