CryptoQuant CEO: ‘Real Bitcoin Bull Run Hasn’t Begun’ — On-Chain Signals Aren’t Clear
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CryptoQuant CEO Ki Young Ju issued a blunt market assessment on May 22: the real Bitcoin bull run hasn’t started. His statement, delivered in the on-chain update, cut through any early optimism. Ju’s thesis is simple—when the genuine cycle turns, every major signal will be unmistakable. Right now, that alignment is absent.
The message lands at a moment when traders are hunting for confirmation. Bitcoin’s price has seen short-lived rallies, but Ju’s data-driven approach suggests these moves lack the structural backing of a true bull phase. For him, the distinction between a speculative bounce and a sustainable expansion is written in on-chain behavior.
What on-chain signals are still missing
CryptoQuant’s platform tracks a range of metrics that historically flash green before a full-blown bull run. Exchange reserve patterns, realized price zones, MVRV ratios, and miner activity are among the lenses analysts use. In previous cycles, these data points converged sharply as accumulation by long-term holders intensified and speculative froth remained muted. Ju’s comment implies that such convergence hasn’t occurred yet.
Instead, the current on-chain picture shows a market still searching for direction. Exchange inflows haven’t dwindled to the levels typical of supply crunches. Realized profit and loss spikes remain sporadic rather than forming a consistent trend of low-time-preference holding. The absence of these confirmations suggests the market isn’t ready to enter the parabolic phase that defines Bitcoin’s second and third-year post-halving moves.
Timing matters more than price
Ju’s emphasis on “all signals” points to a sequencing problem. Bitcoin does not announce its bull runs with a single metric. Historically, the real impulse begins only after a prolonged period of quiet accumulation, falling volatility, and a decisive shift in on-chain cost basis distribution. The current cycle—still digesting the 2024 halving—may be stuck in that waiting room longer than many expect.
Meanwhile, other parts of the digital asset space are heating up. The tokenization sector has been surging, with real-world assets crossing $20B on-chain and major acquisitions like Bullish’s $4.2B purchase of Equiniti. But Bitcoin’s cycle operates under its own rules. For the largest cryptocurrency, institutional inflows and ETF flows can mask the lack of organic holder conviction.
Regulatory shadows don’t help. Banks are still trying to kill the biggest crypto bill in US history, a fight that could shape market access for months to come. Until policy clarity improves, risk-repositioning by large players may remain slow, adding another layer of delay to Bitcoin’s on-chain recovery.
The takeaway from Ju’s signal isn’t a short-term price call. It’s a reminder that the on-chain ledger keeps a record that no amount of headline excitement can distort. What matters now is whether exchange reserves reverse, whether long-term holder supply starts climbing again, and whether miner behavior shifts. None of that is flashing yet. And as Ju made clear, when it does, no one will need to guess.
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