Bitcoin’s share of the total cryptocurrency market capitalization has climbed to 65% — its highest level since early 2021 — as investors rotated out of higher-risk altcoins into the relative safety of the leading digital asset amid persistent macroeconomic uncertainty and tightening liquidity conditions.
The dominance figure, a widely watched barometer of risk appetite within crypto, has risen steadily since peaking in February when it stood at 52%. The shift reflects a familiar pattern: during periods of market stress, capital tends to consolidate in Bitcoin while altcoins, which carry higher volatility and liquidity risk, are sold off disproportionately.
“Bitcoin dominance at 65% tells you that the market is in capital preservation mode,” said analyst Alex Thorn at Galaxy Digital. “It’s the same dynamic you see in equities when investors rotate from small-caps to mega-caps — crypto has its own version of a flight to quality.”
The pattern has been particularly brutal for Layer 1 tokens outside of Ethereum. Solana, Avalanche, and Cardano have all declined 40–60% from their February highs, while the broader altcoin index (ex-Ethereum) is down 55% from its cycle peak.
Contrarian analysts argue that extreme Bitcoin dominance historically precedes altcoin outperformance. “Every major altseason in history has been preceded by a period of dominance above 60%,” noted crypto strategist Michaël van de Poppe. “The setup is forming — the trigger will be whenever BTC breaks decisively above $85K.”
