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Bitcoin NVT Ratio at 41.7: What Network Usage Says About BTC Price
Bitcoin NVT Ratio at 41.7: What Network Usage Says About BTC Price

Key Highlights

Bitcoin hovers near $65,00 to $68,000 as March draws to a close, wrapping up a month marked by sharp swings and cautious consolidation. After opening around $65,000–$67,000, the cryptocurrency climbed toward $74,000 mid-month before pulling back amid quarterly options expirations and profit-taking. 

As of publishing, BTC trades roughly at $67,600, reflecting a modest daily gain of 1.37% but still sitting below the $70,000 psychological barrier that has proven stubborn this quarter. The trading volume for the largest cryptocurrency has increased by 34% to $27.14 billion as it prepares for the weekly opening in the U.S. stock market. 

This recent trajectory tells a familiar post-rally story, with early momentum giving way to volatility as traders digested large derivatives settlements. Bitcoin’s market capitalization sits around $1.33 trillion, underscoring its enduring dominance even as broader risk assets navigate uncertain macro conditions. Yet the real story may lie beneath the surface, in the network’s underlying activity. 

Bitcoin NVT Ratio 

One on-chain metric drawing attention is the Network Value to Transactions (NVT) Ratio, which compares Bitcoin’s total market value to the USD volume of coins actually moving on the blockchain. 

Often called crypto’s answer to the price-to-earnings (PE) ratio, it gauges whether the market price is running ahead of—or supported by—real usage. At approximately 41.7, the current reading lands toward the lower end of historical ranges.

Source: CryptoQuant

Historically, elevated NVT levels—seen during the frenzy of 2017 and the 2021 peak—signaled overvaluation, as soaring market caps outpaced actual transaction demand and often preceded painful corrections. Lower readings, by contrast, have frequently marked periods where network utility appeared undervalued relative to price, coinciding with recovery phases or attractive entry points for longer-term holders.

The history of NVT Ratio levels

The NVT Ratio first gained traction in early 2017 when on-chain analyst Willy Woo introduced it as Bitcoin’s rough equivalent to the traditional price-to-earnings ratio. By dividing the network’s market capitalization by the daily USD value of coins transferred on the blockchain, Woo created a simple gauge of whether price was running ahead of actual usage. 

The indicator’s early readings were often in the single digits to low 20s during Bitcoin’s quieter years, but the metric quickly proved its worth as a bubble detector. 

During the explosive 2017 bull run, the NVT Ratio spiked sharply as Bitcoin’s market cap raced toward $20,000 while on-chain transaction volume failed to keep pace. High readings—approaching or exceeding 100 during Bitcoin’s first year and in some smoothed variants—signaled overvaluation and foreshadowed the brutal 2018 bear market. 

Bitcoin Network Value to Transactions (NVT Ratio)
Source: NewHedge

A similar pattern repeated in 2021: as BTC surged past $60,000, elevated NVT levels again flashed warnings that speculation had outstripped real network activity, preceding another painful correction.

Over time, the indicator has evolved alongside Bitcoin itself. As the network matured, more coins moved into long-term holding, institutional custody, or off-chain solutions like the Lightning Network, pushing the “normal” range gradually higher while making fixed thresholds less reliable. 

Smoothed versions, such as the NVT Signal using a 90-day average of transaction volume, helped filter noise and improved timing for cycle tops and bottoms. Low readings—often below 45—have repeatedly marked undervalued periods and strong accumulation zones, coinciding with market recoveries and the early stages of new bull runs.

Bitcoin Network Value to Transactions (NVT Ratio)
Source: NewHedge

With the market continually moving toward elevated maturity, what once looked “normal” in earlier cycles has shifted as the network matured and off-chain activity (such as Lightning payments or institutional custody) expanded. 

Still, the present sub-50 level suggests transaction volumes are holding up reasonably well against the current valuation, offering little immediate evidence of extreme speculation.

That said, NVT is no crystal ball. It can lag during periods of strong holding behavior or institutional accumulation that doesn’t show up fully in raw on-chain transfers. Combined with other signals—hash rate resilience, ETF flows, and broader adoption trends—it paints a picture of a market that has cooled from recent highs without flashing clear bubble warnings.

As of now, Bitcoin appears to be catching its breath after March’s rollercoaster. Whether the relatively grounded NVT supports another leg higher or simply reflects steady-state utility will depend on how quickly real usage and external demand catch up—or pull away—in the months ahead.

Also read: How Pakistan Used Crypto Diplomacy to Build Ties With Trump’s Inner Circle

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