SSR (Stablecoin Supply Ratio)
SSR (Stablecoin Supply Ratio) is a Bitcoin valuation indicator used to compare price with cost basis, fair value, or profitability conditions across the cycle.
Chart preview
SSR (Stablecoin Supply Ratio) inside the live workspace
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Market use
SSR (Stablecoin Supply Ratio) is usually read as valuation and cost-basis context inside the broader Bitcoin stack.
Live access
This guide is public, but SSR (Stablecoin Supply Ratio) is a premium indicator inside FEELS Analytics. Compare plans or sign in so premium can be enabled on your account.
Next step
Use the explainer here, then move into the app to compare this signal with related indicators and live BTC price context.
What it measures
SSR (Stablecoin Supply Ratio) helps show whether BTC looks stretched, neutral, or compressed relative to a longer-term value baseline.
Investors usually care more about extremes and regime shifts than day-to-day noise in the middle of the range.
It works best when paired with trend or sentiment tools so valuation context is confirmed from a second angle.
How it is calculated
- The core calculation expresses SSR (Stablecoin Supply Ratio) as a ratio between underlying series so relative strength is easier to compare over time.
- Analysts usually compare the current reading with prior cycle extremes instead of reacting to a single short-term move.
- Because methodology can vary slightly between providers, it is best to stay consistent with one data source when comparing cycles.
How it behaved in past cycles
- Readings typically expand as bull markets mature and compress as value resets deeper into bear markets.
- The most important signals often appear near extremes rather than in the middle of the range.
- It works best when combined with trend and sentiment instead of used in isolation.
How traders usually use it
- Use SSR (Stablecoin Supply Ratio) to frame valuation and cost-basis context before reacting to shorter-term BTC price moves.
- Compare the current reading with prior cycle extremes instead of reacting to a single daily move in isolation.
- Pair it with MVRV Z-Score and MVRV Ratio so one signal is confirmed from a second angle.
Common mistakes
- Do not treat SSR (Stablecoin Supply Ratio) as a standalone buy or sell trigger without broader confirmation.
- Avoid reading one spike as decisive when the indicator is meant to describe slower valuation and cost-basis context.
- Always check price trend, liquidity, and sentiment together before turning an indicator reading into a trade thesis.
Questions investors ask
What does SSR (Stablecoin Supply Ratio) tell you?
SSR (Stablecoin Supply Ratio) is a Bitcoin valuation indicator used to compare price with cost basis, fair value, or profitability conditions across the cycle.
How should investors use SSR (Stablecoin Supply Ratio)?
It works best when combined with trend and sentiment instead of used in isolation. It works best as context, then gets confirmed with price trend, macro conditions, or related indicators.
Can you access SSR (Stablecoin Supply Ratio) in FEELS Analytics?
This guide is public, but SSR (Stablecoin Supply Ratio) is a premium indicator inside FEELS Analytics. Compare plans or sign in so premium can be enabled on your account.
Want the live SSR (Stablecoin Supply Ratio) chart?
The explainer is public, but the interactive SSR (Stablecoin Supply Ratio) chart lives inside FEELS Analytics premium. Compare plans or sign in first to manage access on your account.