3 reasons why Bitcoin is regaining its crypto market dominance
Bitcoin (BTC) is regaining its lost crypto market dominance even as it trades nearly 60% below its record highs.
Bitcoin dominance at 6-month highs
The Bitcoin Market Dominance (BTC.D) index, a metric that weighs BTC’s market capitalization against the rest of the cryptocurrency market, jumped to around 47% on May 27, its highest since October 2021.
The dominance index swelled despite the drop in Bitcoin’s market cap in the last six months from $1.3 trillion in November 2021 to nearly $550 billion in May 2022, suggesting that traders were more comfortable selling altcoins.
Let’s look at three likely reasons why traders have been rotating out of the altcoin market to seek safety in Bitcoin.
Ethereum “Merge” narrative is cooling down
Ethereum’s native token Ether (ETH), the largest alternative cryptocurrency by market cap, has witnessed consistent declines in its market dominance in the last five months—from 22.38% in December 2021 to 17.86% in May 2022.
The plunge comes after two years of a sustained uptrend, with ETH/BTC rising more than 200% between September 2019 and December 2021.
As Cointelegraph reported, Ether outperformed Bitcoin in recent years, largely due to the hype surrounding its long-awaited protocol upgrade, called “the Merge,” which hopes to make Ethereum more scalable and less expensive.
But the upgrade, which aims to transition Ethereum’s blockchain from proof-of-work to proof-of-stake—a counterpart known as Beacon Chain, has faced repeated delays in its launch.
Only recently, Martin Köppelmann, the co-founder of the Ethereum Virtual Machine- (EVM)-compatible Gnosis chain, highlighted a seven-block reorganization on the Beacon Chain, meaning that the chain got briefly “forked” in its testing phase.
The Ethereum beacon chain experienced a 7-block deep reorg ~2.5h ago. This shows that the current attestation strategy of nodes should be reconsidered to hopefully result in a more stable chain! (proposals already exist) pic.twitter.com/BkQrKuUlw1
— Martin Köppelmann (@koeppelmann) May 25, 2022
Ether dropped by nearly 13.5% against the U.S. dollar following the reveal on May 25 while ETH/BTC plunged to 0.059, the lowest in six months.
Ethereum lacks narratives to drive ETH’s price upward after undergoing the Merge upgrade, noted OxHamZ, an independent market analyst, saying that investors have already “priced in” the network upgrade hype.
What’s the narrative to own ETH after the merge?
All KPIs are down
Active wallets stagnant
NFT hype dead
LP trading volumes trending poorly
Liquidity shrink in stables
L2 cannibalization growing (h/t @TaschaLabs)ETH is down 50% but the value of its block-space is also down
— 0xHamZ (@0xHamz) May 25, 2022
LUNA to zero
Bitcoin’s renewed crypto market strength also appears due to the Terra (LUNA) market’s collapse.
LUNA/BTC, a financial instrument that traces the Terra token’s strength against Bitcoin, fell by 99.99% to 0.00000004 in May, which made it practically worthless.
Meanwhile, LUNA declined similarly against the dollar, raising anticipations that traders dumped the token to seek safety in BTC and cash.
LUNA’s market cap before the May’s deadly crash was $40.88 billion.
Related: Crypto funds under management drop to a low not seen since July 2021
Altszn ded
On the whole, the altcoin market, containing everything from large-cap blockchain projects to sketchy crypto assets, has fallen by nearly 65% six months after topping out near $1.7 trillion.
A deeper look into some tokens shows that — unlike Bitcoin — most are down over 80% from their all-time highs, hinting at an overall investor exit from altcoins and into cash, stablecoins or BTC.
That is primarily because Bitcoin isn’t only the oldest blockchain, but stands on its own without any central authority.
No one controls the #bitcoin network.
— CZ Binance (@cz_binance) May 26, 2022
Historically, Bitcoin’s dominance drops during crypto bull markets as waves of new tokens spring up during the mania phase.
For instance, the duration of the infamous initial coin offering (ICO) pump coincided with BTC.D dropping from nearly 96% in January 2017 to 35% in January 2018.
Then the March 2020 crash was the beginning of the DeFi and nonfungible token (NFT) hype, boosted further by the Federal Reserve’s quantitative easing.
Therefore, if Bitcoin’s market dominance has indeed bottomed out, it could once again align with a macro bottom in Bitcoin price, and possibly the beginning of a new bull market phase in the coming months.
The views and opinions expressed here are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of Cointelegraph.com. Every investment and trading move involves risk, you should conduct your own research when making a decision.