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“Alt Season Is Gone”? Analyst Says Old Playbook's Broken

3h ago
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Bitcoin’s share of total crypto market value has been stuck between 56% and 63% this year, a four-year high that leaves little room for the classic rotation into altcoins. Historically, broad altcoin rallies have required bitcoin dominance to fall below 55%, the host notes; this cycle, it has not broken that level once.

Other indicators echo the same story. The widely watched “altcoin season index” is sitting in the mid‑40s, far from the 75 threshold that would signal a true alt season, and roughly 84% of all coins trade below their 200‑day moving average.

Citing CryptoQuant data, Guy says net spot selling of altcoins has hit a five‑year high, suggesting capital is actively exiting the sector rather than rotating within it.

The breakdown is most visible in Ethereum. The ETH/BTC ratio has slumped to around 0.0268, down from roughly 0.08 at the 2021 cycle peak – a two‑thirds collapse.

Layer‑2 networks now handle over 90% of Ethereum’s transaction activity, but, according to the video, fee revenue to the base layer has fallen more than 95% from 2021 highs. One estimate from Standard Chartered, cited by the host, claims Coinbase’s Base network alone may have stripped about $50 billion from ETH’s market cap by diverting fees.

While the old conveyor belt has stalled, liquidity has not disappeared. It is concentrating.

Guy points to BlackRock’s spot bitcoin ETF, which reached around $54 billion in assets by March, as an “ETF wall” that channels institutional money into BTC with no obvious mechanism for it to leak out into altcoins. Within the rest of the market, the top 10 altcoins now account for roughly 80.5% of non‑bitcoin market cap.

Meanwhile, many smaller projects are simply shutting down. Data from RootData, referenced in the video, show more than 70 crypto projects closed in the first half of the year, including well‑funded but unsuccessful ventures such as Entropy, Yup and Syndicate Labs.

Guy quotes CryptoQuant’s CEO Ki Young Ju as saying that in this environment “99.9% of altcoins should be rejected.”

Yet he does not see crypto as dead. Instead, he argues the coming recovery will be selective and tied to “real users, real revenue or real utility."

Coin Bureau's host highlights three areas already showing growth: tokenized real‑world assets (expanding from about $5 billion to over $30 billion, with BlackRock’s BUIDL fund above $2.5 billion).

Meanwhile, revenue‑generating DeFi (with Hyperliquid surpassing $1.16 billion in cumulative fees and Aave projected to earn around $60 million in profit), and AI‑linked tokens, where sector valuations have seen triple‑digit year‑on‑year growth.

For traders trying to distinguish narrative from rotation, the host suggests a simple “scoreboard”:

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3h ago
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