Crypto market structure doesn’t have to be complicated. If you want to understand where capital is moving, there are two charts that explain almost everything:
BTC Dominance (BTC.D) and ETH/BTC.
These aren’t random indicators that change overnight. They reflect the real foundation of liquidity and positioning across the entire market.
Bitcoin remains the largest asset in crypto, with Ethereum right behind it. And BTC dominance rarely breaks its trend — but when it does, it’s never by accident.
A shift in BTC.D usually signals a major pivot in capital flow: liquidity begins moving from Bitcoin into Ethereum and eventually into altcoins.
If you compare BTC.D and ETH/BTC at the previous cycle top to where we are now, the structure becomes obvious — and it aligns closely with broader global liquidity conditions.
Here’s what most traders get wrong:
A drop in BTC dominance doesn’t mean Bitcoin is finished.
Historically, Bitcoin can continue rising even while dominance falls. The dominance decline happens not because BTC is weak, but because fresh capital starts rotating into ETH and the rest of the market.
That rotation only occurs when liquidity is expanding.
So if you think the market is “done for another year,” that’s not caution — that’s being early in the wrong direction.
You don’t need dozens of indicators.
You don’t need complicated narratives.
Sometimes, one chart tells you exactly where we are in the cycle.
Do you believe this is the beginning of capital rotation — or are you still waiting for confirmation?
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