This is the real reason Elon Musk’s Tesla did not sell Bitcoin in Q4 2022

  • Elon Musk’s electric car company Tesla is holding onto its 9,720 Bitcoin at an average purchase cost of $32,099. 
  • Tesla has released its Q4 2022 financial report and revealed that no BTC transactions were conducted, the firm holds 9,720 Bitcoin. 
  • The recent Bitcoin price rally has pushed BTC above $23,000, motivating holders and miners to take exit liquidity after the long bear market. 

Elon Musk’s Tesla released its Q4 2022 financial report and revealed that the electric car company did not conduct any Bitcoin transactions. Tesla took an impairment of $34 million and currently holds about 9,720 BTC with an average purchase cost of $32,099 per Bitcoin. 

Also read: How China could legalize crypto in its efforts to tax cryptocurrency firms and individuals

Elon Musk’s Tesla holds on to its $245.5 million worth of Bitcoin, exits liquidity trap

Tesla, Elon Musk’s electric car company did not sell its Bitcoin holdings in Q4 2022. The firm escaped the exit liquidity trap that plagued BTC holders since the asset climbed above $23,000. 

Tesla Balance Sheet history

In the Bitcoin price rally that started in January 2023, BTC surprised many investors. However, alongside higher prices there has been a spike in motivation for holders and miners to take exit liquidity after the prolonged bear market of 2022. 

New investors and miners on the Bitcoin network have been motivated to spend and take the opportunity to exit and secure profit. There is a spike in resilience for long-term holders.  

Bitcoin exit liquidity trap and what to expect from investors capitalizing on opportunity

When the market is in a prolonged bottom (or top) discovery stage, new investor behavior becomes an influential factor in forming local recovery (or correction) pivot points. This behavior can be assessed using the Percentage of Short-Term Holder Supply in Profit metric by crypto intelligence tracker Glassnode. 

During bear markets, when more than 97.5% of the acquired supply by new investors is in loss the chance of seller exhaustion rises exponentially. Conversely, when upwards of 97.5% of short-term holder supply is in profit, these players tend to seize the opportunity and exit at break-even or profit. 

Bitcoin: Percent of short-term holder supply in profit

Bitcoin’s price rally to $23,000 has pushed this metric to “> 97.5% in profit” for the first time since the asset hit its all-time high in November 2021, this is also expected to increase the probability of sell pressure sourced from short-term holders growing. 

Tesla’s average cost per Bitcoin stands at $32,099, therefore the firm is likely to profit from shedding BTC holdings once the asset crosses the $32,000 mark. Tesla is unlikely to sell BTC before it crosses the key $32,000 level as this would imply that the electric car company books losses. 

Tesla’s break-even for Bitcoin holdings is therefore $32,099. Experts on crypto Twitter, however, interpret the firm’s decision to hold on to BTC as a commitment to embracing Bitcoin and cryptocurrencies. 

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