
For many traders, the “altseason” playbook has relied on a familiar pattern: profits from Bitcoin flow into smaller tokens, sparking broad-based rallies across the market. But new on-chain and market-structure indicators suggest that mechanism is weakening—and that could meaningfully change how altcoins move in the next phase of the cycle.
CryptoQuant CEO Ki Young Ju says the Bitcoin-to-altcoin rotation trade has “basically disappeared,” citing data that shows BTC-pair altcoin trading activity has fallen to its weakest levels since 2021. At the same time, the altcoin market appears more concentrated, with fewer large-cap tokens commanding most of the sector’s value—another factor that may reduce the breadth of any future rally.
Key takeaways
CryptoQuant data cited by Ki Young Ju shows BTC-pair altcoin trading volume has dropped to post-2021 lows, weakening the usual rotation from Bitcoin into altcoins. Altcoin liquidity and capital are increasingly concentrated in fewer projects, which can delay or limit broad “altseason” style moves. Bitcoin dominance is showing early signs of a rebound that could keep capital favoring BTC over smaller tokens in the near term. The next phase of altcoin strength may depend less on “narrative-only” momentum and more on tokens tied to real usage and revenue themes.Why the classic rotation trade is fading
Ki Young Ju, CEO of CryptoQuant, argues that the traditional “Bitcoin pumps, then alts catch up” sequence is no longer behaving the way it did during prior bull cycles. In a Saturday post on X, he said the Bitcoin-to-altcoin rotation trend has “basically disappeared,” pointing to CryptoQuant data that tracks aggregated altcoin trading volume for BTC-priced pairs.
That metric focuses on mid- and lower-cap altcoins traded against Bitcoin on centralized exchanges, explicitly excluding major assets such as Ether (ETH), XRP, BNB, and Solana (SOL). In other words, it attempts to measure whether traders are using BTC as the funding source for speculative positions in smaller coins.
Historically, that type of flow intensified during two key periods—2017 and again in 2021—helping set the conditions for some of the most aggressive alt rallies. But the chart Young Ju referenced suggests BTC-pair altcoin activity remains near post-2021 lows, implying that Bitcoin is no longer serving as the primary liquidity engine for broad alt speculation.
“The era of alts pumping just because BTC pumps may be over,” Young Ju wrote, framing the slowdown in rotation as a potential structural shift rather than a short-term pause.
More money, fewer tokens
Beyond rotation, the composition of the altcoin market also appears to have changed. Young Ju pointed to increasing concentration across the non-BTC, non-stablecoin segment. Using figures reported for Saturday, the non-BTC, non-stablecoin market value was roughly $600 billion, while the top 10 non-stablecoin altcoins accounted for about $483 billion—around 80.5% of the total.
That implies that instead of value spreading across a wide range of assets, the market’s center of gravity is moving toward a smaller set of larger names. When capital is clustered, rallies often become less uniform, with fewer tokens capturing most of the upside.
The narrowing of large-cap altcoins has also been highlighted by CoinMarketCap snapshots. According to a 2021 historical snapshot referenced in the source, there were roughly 106 altcoins above $1 billion in market valuation at that time. By June 2026, that number had fallen to around 50, suggesting that the pool of sufficiently large assets to dominate flows has shrunk materially.
Young Ju connects those trends to a broader maturity in the market. He also said in a separate thread that “narrative-only altcoins” are losing relevance as crypto develops, arguing that hype alone is no longer enough to sustain sustained attention across the board.
While that doesn’t mean the altcoin market is disappearing, it suggests a different kind of cycle—one where fewer projects benefit from most of the capital and where investor demand may be driven by more concrete fundamentals.
What themes could matter more than broad alt hype
Young Ju’s argument is not simply that altcoins are weaker; it’s that the strongest pockets of the market may be linked to areas with clearer business models and real-world utility. In his view, stronger activity is tied to revenue-generating decentralized finance, stablecoins, tokenized real-world assets, and AI agent-related applications.
That framing matters for traders because it changes the selection problem. If rotation into the entire alt market is less reliable, performance may hinge on identifying which tokens have genuine demand drivers rather than relying on “market beta” from broad speculation.
It also implies that the next alt cycle—if it arrives—may look different from the older playbook. Instead of a sweeping move across many names, the cycle could be characterized by narrower leadership tied to specific sectors where usage and adoption can compound.
Bitcoin dominance could be a near-term headwind
Another factor potentially limiting altcoin momentum is a rebound in Bitcoin’s share of the overall crypto market. The source cites Bitcoin dominance (BTC.D) showing early signs of a lift after interacting with its 100-week exponential moving average (100-week EMA) and the lower trend line of an ascending channel at around the 58.75% level, according to a weekly chart on TradingView.
In the same setup, BTC.D could rise toward the channel’s upper trend line near 60% if momentum continues. If BTC.D moves higher toward that level, the implication is straightforward: Bitcoin would be gaining market share relative to the rest of crypto, which can divert speculative liquidity away from smaller assets.
Analyst Rekt Capital shared a similar perspective on X, citing bullish divergence on Bitcoin dominance. The divergence described in the source follows a common technical interpretation: BTC.D making lower lows while the RSI makes higher lows, often signaling weakening downside pressure and the potential for a rebound—hence the view that “altseason is postponed.”
Rekt Capital, however, also warned that the upside may not be unlimited. He suggested the dominance rebound could represent a post-breakdown relief move before further weakness returns, with a bearish case pointing to BTC.D possibly drifting toward its 200-week EMA at around 57%.
For alt traders, the practical takeaway is that even if smaller coins find their footing, a strengthening BTC dominance trend can cap how broad and how fast alt rallies spread—particularly in the early stages of any rotation attempt.
As rotation signals remain weak and market leadership looks increasingly concentrated, investors may want to watch two things closely: whether BTC-pair altcoin volume starts to recover from its post-2021 lows, and whether BTC dominance sustains its rebound or rolls over again. The answers to those questions will likely determine whether any alt rally becomes broad-based—or stays confined to a narrower group of assets with more durable demand.
This article was originally published as Bitcoin’s Altcoin Rotation Fades, Fueling Questions on Altseasons on Crypto Breaking News – your trusted source for crypto news, Bitcoin news, and blockchain updates.

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