On-Chain vs. Macro Valuation Models: Mga Kagamitan para sa Pagtukoy ng Makatarungang Halaga ng BTC

Sa loob ng mga dekada, ang mga mamumuhunan ay umaasa sa mga napatunayan at epektibong paraan upang tasahin ang mga asset: discounted cash flow (DCF) para sa mga stock, rental yields para sa real estate, at geopolitical supply constraints para sa mga commodity tulad ng langis. Ang mga modelong ito ay gumagana dahil umaasa sila sa mga predictable na input—cash flow, interest rates, o physical inventory.

Ang Bitcoin, gayunpaman, ay nagpapakita ng natatanging hamon. Wala itong earnings statement, hindi ito gumagawa ng quarterly revenue, at umiiral ito nang buong-buo sa digital realm. Ito ay gumagana nang sabay bilang isang bagong monetary network, isang scarce digital commodity, at isang highly volatile growth asset. Ang pagsisikap na mag-aplay ng traditional models, tulad ng Price-to-Earnings (P/E) ratio, ay walang saysay.

Upang lumampas sa speculative price guessing at bumuo ng robust investment thesis, ang mga modernong crypto analyst ay kailangang gumamit ng specialized toolkits. Ang artikulong ito ay nag-e-explore ng dalawang pangunahing pillar ng Bitcoin valuation: ang Mga Modelong On-Chain, na nag-aanalyze ng native activity at psychology ng network, at ang Mga Modelong Makroekonomiko, na nagpo-posisyon ng Bitcoin sa loob ng global financial landscape. Sa pamamagitan ng pag-synthesize ng mga approach na ito, ang mga mamumuhunan ay makakakilala ng mga panahon ng malinaw na over- o undervaluation, na nagbibigay-daan sa mas matalinong, data-driven na desisyon.


Ang Hamon ng Ebalwasyon ng Isang Digital na Asset

Bago sumisid sa mga tool, kailangan muna nating tanggapin na ang ebalwasyon ng Bitcoin ay nangangailangan ng pundamental na pagbabago sa pananaw. Hindi tayo nag-e-ebalwasyon ng isang kumpanya; nag-e-ebalwasyon tayo ng isang desentralisadong, kusang napapanatiling sistemang salapi.

Bitcoin Bilang Isang Natatanging Klase ng Asset

Tinutukoy ng tradisyunal na pananalapi ang mga asset batay sa kanilang mga katangian. Ito ba ay isang security (na kumakatawan sa pagmamay-ari)? Ito ba ay isang commodity (isang fungible na pisikal na bilihin)? Ito ba ay isang currency (isang midyum ng palitan)?

Umiiral ang Bitcoin sa interseksyon ng mga kategoryang ito. Ang kanyang nakatakdang cap sa supply na 21 milyong coin ay nagtatatag dito bilang digital na kakulangan—isang katangian ng commodity. Ang mga kakayahan nitong maglipat sa network ay ginagawa itong currency. Ngunit pinakamahalaga, ang halaga nito ay nagmumula hindi sa mga daloy ng cash kundi mula sa konsensus ng mga gumagamit nito, ang seguridad ng desentralisadong network nito, at ang lumalaking kredibilidad nito bilang isang pangmatagalang panustos ng halaga.

Ang «konsensus na ebalwasyon» na ito ay nangangahulugang ang mga galaw ng presyo ay malakas na naaapektuhan ng sikolohikal na kalagayan ng merkado—takot, kasakiman, pagsuko, at euforia. Ang on-chain analysis ay partikular na dinisenyo upang sukatin ang kolektibong sikolohiyang ito.

Bakit Hindi Sapat ang Mga Tradisyunal na Metodo

Kung susubukan mong gamitin ang DCF modeling sa Bitcoin, ang mga variable ay halos walang kahulugan. Ano ang inaasahang «growth rate» ng isang sistemang salapi? Ano ang inaasahang «dividend» nito?

Sa halip, ang proposisyon ng halaga ng Bitcoin ay nakasandal sa dalawang haligi:

  1. Kakulangan at Seguridad: Sinusukat ng mga sukatan ng network (hash rate, supply issuance, difficulty adjustments).
  2. Pag-ampon at Pag-uugali ng Mamumuhunan: Sinusukat ng ekonomikong aktibidad sa blockchain (transaction volume, wallet accumulation, holding periods).

Ang layunin ng mga modernong modelo ng ebalwasyon ay magbigay ng konteksto para sa kasalukuyang presyo ng merkado sa pamamagitan ng paghahambing nito sa mga pundamental na sukatan na nagmumula mismo sa blockchain.


Pillar 1: On-Chain Valuation Models (The Inner Economy)

On-chain analysis uses publicly verifiable data recorded on the blockchain ledger. Unlike market data, which only tracks price and volume on exchanges, on-chain data tracks the movement of every single coin, providing deep insight into investor holding patterns and cost bases.

The core innovation in this field is the concept of Realized Capitalization, which is the foundation for almost all advanced on-chain metrics.

Understanding Market Cap vs. Realized Cap

The primary valuation discrepancy in Bitcoin markets is often between what the market says the coins are worth right now, and what the collective market paid for those coins historically.

Market Capitalization (Market Cap)

This is the figure everyone watches: Market Cap reflects the aggregate, instantaneous value assigned by the current market.

Realized Capitalization (Realized Cap)

Realized Cap is a much more robust, foundational metric. It calculates the value of the total circulating supply based on the price when each coin last moved (i.e., when it was last involved in an on-chain transaction).

  • Example: If Coin A was bought and moved in 2013 when BTC was $100, its contribution to the Realized Cap is $100, even if the current price is $70,000. If Coin B moved yesterday at $70,000, its contribution is $70,000.

The implication: Realized Cap represents the aggregate cost basis of the network. It assumes that whenever a coin moves, that movement reflects a transaction where the holder paid a specific price for it. It strips out the influence of "lost" or long-dormant coins that might distort the Market Cap.

The MVRV Z-Score Explained

The Market Value to Realized Value (MVRV) ratio is perhaps the most famous and effective on-chain metric for identifying macro market tops and bottoms.

The MVRV ratio compares the instantaneous value (Market Cap) to the fundamental cost basis (Realized Cap).

  • MVRV = 1: The market price exactly matches the average cost basis of all investors. This is often a zone of deep consolidation or fair value.
  • MVRV > 1: The network is trading above its average cost basis, indicating aggregate unrealized profits.
  • MVRV < 1: The network is trading below its average cost basis, indicating aggregate unrealized losses (capitulation).

MVRV Z-Score Interpretation

The Z-Score refinement takes the MVRV ratio and standardizes it, measuring how many standard deviations the ratio is above or below its historical average. This makes it easier to compare current market conditions to past extremes.

Z-Score Zone Interpretation Investment Strategy Signal
Green Zone (e.g., < -1) Market Value significantly below Realized Value. Extreme undervaluation; high probability of deep capitulation or macro bottom formation. Accumulation Phase: Historically strong buying opportunity.
Neutral Zone (e.g., -1 to 2) Market trading near or slightly above the cost basis. Fair value or early bull run. Hold/DCA: Neutral market conditions.
Red Zone (e.g., > 5) Market Value multiple standard deviations above Realized Value. Extreme overvaluation; euphoria and high probability of macro top formation. Distribution Phase: Historically strong selling opportunity.

Practical Use Case: During the sharp market downturns of 2020 and 2022, the MVRV Z-Score fell deep into the green zone, signaling that the instantaneous market price was so far below the collective cost basis that the market was statistically oversold—a textbook buying signal.

Net Unrealized Profit/Loss (NUPL)

While the MVRV Z-Score is excellent for statistical extremes, the Net Unrealized Profit/Loss (NUPL) provides a clear visualization of collective investor sentiment and market phase psychology.

NUPL is calculated by taking the relative difference between Market Cap and Realized Cap and normalizing it:

The resulting indicator is a simple visualization that shows the net amount of profit or loss held by the entire Bitcoin network at any given time.

NUPL Zone Interpretation:

  1. Capitulation (Deep Red/Orange): High net unrealized loss. Panic selling and full investor despair. Often signals the final stage of a bear market before recovery.
  2. Hope/Optimism (Yellow/Light Green): The market begins trading above its cost basis, but profits are modest. Investors begin to feel relief.
  3. Euphoria/Greed (Dark Green/Blue): High net unrealized profit. The vast majority of investors are sitting on huge gains. Historically, this precedes major distribution and macro tops as long-term holders realize profits.

NUPL is particularly useful for identifying behavioral shifts. When the NUPL line dips rapidly from "Optimism" back toward "Capitulation," it signals a significant shakeout where weak hands are forced to sell at a loss.

Supply Dynamics: The Puell Multiple and Hash Ribbon

While MVRV and NUPL focus on the demand side and investor psychology, other metrics focus on the supply side, particularly the behavior of miners, who are constant suppliers of new Bitcoin.

The Puell Multiple

The Puell Multiple measures the supply pressure coming from miners. It compares the daily issuance value of new coins (in USD) to the one-year moving average of that value.

  • High Puell Multiple: Indicates that daily miner revenue is significantly higher than its annual average. This suggests that the current price is very profitable for miners, potentially incentivizing increased selling pressure (distribution). Historically seen near market tops.
  • Low Puell Multiple: Indicates that daily miner revenue is depressed relative to its annual average. This suggests miners are struggling, leading to potential capitulation among inefficient miners. This forced shutdown reduces immediate selling pressure and often occurs near market bottoms.

The Hash Ribbon

The Hash Ribbon focuses on the operational health of the mining network (hash rate). When hash rate drops significantly, it means miners are turning off their machines, often due to low profitability. This typically signals a miner capitulation event.

Analysis: When the faster moving average of the hash rate crosses below the slower moving average, miner capitulation is occurring. Historically, the best buying opportunities (macro bottoms) occur shortly after the slower moving average begins to trend upward again, confirming that the weak hands have been shaken out and the worst of the bear market is over.


Pillar 2: Macroeconomic and External Valuation Models (The Global Context)

While on-chain metrics gauge the internal health and psychology of the Bitcoin network, they do not exist in a vacuum. Bitcoin is increasingly intertwined with global finance, requiring investors to integrate macroeconomic factors into their valuation thesis.

Stock-to-Flow (S2F) and its Limitations

The Stock-to-Flow model is one of the most famous attempts to assign a scarcity-driven valuation to Bitcoin, drawing inspiration from commodities like gold and silver.

Model Concept: S2F measures scarcity by comparing the existing supply ("Stock") to the rate at which new supply is created ("Flow").

  • The Thesis: Because Bitcoin's "Flow" (new issuance) is cut in half every four years (the Halving), its S2F ratio increases dramatically over time. This increasing scarcity should, according to commodity theory, correlate with massive increases in price.

Critique and Usefulness: S2F accurately models the exponential growth of Bitcoin's scarcity, confirming its hard-money characteristics. However, the model has been criticized for being overly simplistic because it assumes:

  1. Constant and exponential demand growth forever.
  2. That scarcity alone drives value, ignoring systemic shocks or regulatory changes.

While S2F provides a useful baseline for the long-term potential valuation driven by scarcity, it is not a practical tool for market timing or predicting short-term cyclical peaks.

Modeling Institutional Capital Flows

Perhaps the most significant external valuation factor today is the influx of institutional capital. When large financial entities (asset managers, corporations, sovereign wealth funds) allocate capital to BTC, it represents massive, concentrated demand that quickly absorbs available market supply.

Institutional adoption fundamentally changes the valuation equation from "retail speculation" to "asset management."

Absorbing Available Float

When large, regulated investment vehicles (like Spot Bitcoin ETFs) launch, they require massive amounts of physical BTC to back their shares. This creates a "demand shock" on the available supply that retail investors typically buy on exchanges (the "float").

Valuation Impact: Valuation can be modeled based on supply absorption. If institutions consistently purchase more BTC daily than miners are producing, the floating supply shrinks. A smaller float means any new inflow of capital—even from retail—has a much greater impact on the price.

  • Analyst Tool: Tracking Net Asset Value (NAV) flows into and out of regulated investment products (ETFs, ETPs, trusts). Consistent, high-volume inflows are a strong bullish signal for short-to-medium-term valuation, regardless of what on-chain metrics might say about short-term sentiment.

The "Corporate Treasury" Valuation

Another macroeconomic valuation approach involves assessing how much global corporate treasury reserves and sovereign wealth funds could potentially allocate to Bitcoin (often cited as 1% to 5% allocations).

This model doesn't predict price; rather, it sets a potential addressable market size. If Bitcoin captures even a fraction of the market cap of gold, global bond markets, or high-net-worth individual portfolios, the valuation implies orders of magnitude higher than today’s price. This approach frames BTC as a risk-hedging tool rather than a purely speculative asset.

Interpreting the Macro Environment

Bitcoin's valuation is highly sensitive to the global cost of capital and inflation expectations.

Interest Rates (The Cost of Capital)

When central banks raise interest rates, the cost of borrowing increases. This often hurts high-beta growth assets and assets without immediate cash flow (like Bitcoin).

  • Low Rates: Encourage speculation and debt-fueled investment, favoring high-risk, high-reward assets like BTC.
  • High Rates: Encourage risk-off behavior, favoring cash or short-term treasury bonds, acting as a gravitational drag on BTC valuation.

Valuation Tool: Monitoring the Federal Reserve’s policy statements and the trajectory of the Dollar Index (DXY). When the DXY is weak (signaling global liquidity is high), risk assets generally perform better.

Inflation and Devaluation

Bitcoin’s core valuation thesis is that its hard cap and verifiable scarcity make it a superior hedge against the devaluation of fiat currencies (inflation).

When macroeconomic indicators show persistent, elevated inflation, Bitcoin’s utility as a censorship-resistant store of value increases. This thesis is often measured by analyzing correlations. When the price of gold and Bitcoin move in tandem during periods of high monetary expansion, the market is temporarily valuing both as inflation hedges.


Synthesizing the Data: Building a Cohesive Valuation Thesis

The true strength of a sophisticated valuation approach comes from triangulating data—using multiple models to confirm a shared conclusion. Relying on a single indicator, whether S2F or MVRV, exposes the investor to high risk when that indicator fails to account for unprecedented market shifts (e.g., pandemic stimulus, global institutional adoption).

The Importance of Triangulation

A robust investment thesis requires cross-confirmation across the on-chain and macroeconomic pillars.

Example 1: Confirming a Macro Bottom

Imagine a situation where:

  1. On-Chain Metrics: MVRV Z-Score is deep in the green zone, and NUPL indicates "Capitulation." (Signaling statistical undervaluation and extreme fear.)
  2. Supply Dynamics: The Puell Multiple is low, and the Hash Ribbon shows the start of miner recovery. (Signaling supply pressure is easing.)
  3. Macro/External Factors: Inflation expectations are high, and the central bank signals a pause in interest rate hikes. (Signaling favorable macro tailwinds and increased utility as a hedge.)

When all three data points align, the case for a significant accumulation period (macro bottom) is extremely strong.

Example 2: Confirming Overvaluation

Consider a different scenario:

  1. On-Chain Metrics: MVRV Z-Score is touching the red zone, and NUPL is in "Euphoria." (Signaling overbought conditions.)
  2. Supply Dynamics: Long-term holder (LTH) metrics show high distribution (long-term holders are selling coins they acquired cheaply). (Signaling supply absorption is failing.)
  3. Macro/External Factors: The central bank announces a new quantitative tightening program, and regulated ETFs show consistent net outflows. (Signaling major capital exiting the asset.)

This alignment suggests that the risk-reward ratio is poor, and a distribution phase (selling) is warranted, regardless of the mainstream media hype.

Identifying Valuation Zones, Not Price Points

Sophisticated investors use these models to identify broad zones of value—accumulation zones, fair value zones, and distribution zones—rather than predicting a specific price target for a specific date.

  • Accumulation Zone: Defined by MVRV Z-Score in the green/blue area, NUPL in capitulation, and low institutional outflows. This is the period to gradually build a position.
  • Distribution Zone: Defined by MVRV Z-Score in the red/yellow area, NUPL in euphoria, and increasing long-term holder selling. This is the period to gradually take profits.

Avoiding Emotional Decision Making

The primary function of these valuation models is to provide an objective anchor when volatility and emotional narratives are at their peak.

During periods of extreme market fear (when the price is collapsing), on-chain metrics often confirm that the price is statistically cheap, providing the confidence needed to buy against the crowd. Conversely, during periods of media-driven euphoria, MVRV Z-Score warns that the market has historically topped out at these levels, providing the rationale to realize profits when it feels most psychologically difficult to do so.


Conclusion: A Data-Driven Approach to Digital Assets

Ang pagtatawag ng halaga sa Bitcoin ay nangangailangan ng pag-iwan sa mga tool ng traditional finance at ang pag-adopt ng bagong hybrid analytical framework. Sa pamamagitan ng pag-master ng fundamental on-chain metrics—tulad ng MVRV Z-Score, na nagco-compare ng instantaneous value sa cost basis, at NUPL, na nagtra-track ng investor psychology—ang mga mamumuhunan ay nakakakuha ng unique insight sa internal workings ng network.

Ang pagkakapareho ng internal view na ito sa pag-unawa sa macroeconomic models—ang pagtra-track ng institutional inflows, inflation expectations, at interest rate policies—ay nagbibigay-daan sa complete picture.

Ang layunin ay hindi makahanap ng single, magic number na "dapat" na halaga ng Bitcoin, kundi gamitin ang objective data upang i-define kung saan tayo sa market cycle. Sa pamamagitan ng pagtriangulate ng mga distinct valuation tools na ito, ang mga mamumuhunan ay makakabuo ng robust, self-sovereign thesis, na may kumpiyansa na mag-navigate sa complex, volatile landscape ng digital economy.