Bitcoin’s market dominance is very high right now.
At the same time, people are tired and negative about altcoins.

Most of the money in crypto has moved into Bitcoin.
Almost everyone is positioned the same way — heavily in BTC.
And historically, that’s when things start to change.
Not when everyone feels confident — but when fear is high.
Why Bitcoin Dominance Matters
When Bitcoin dominance rises quickly, money flows into Bitcoin first.
This usually happens when people want safety. It’s a defensive move.
But after that move slows down, a shift can happen:
Bitcoin price becomes stable
Volatility decreases
Some altcoins start showing strength
Money slowly moves from BTC into alts
If Bitcoin dominance starts dropping steadily, that’s not random noise.
It often means money is spreading back into other coins.
Fear Often Comes Before the Move
Right now, sentiment around altcoins is weak.
They’ve underperformed, and many traders have lost confidence.
Retail interest is low.
That’s usually not how a market top looks.
In past cycles like 2017 and 2021, altcoin rallies started when people didn’t believe in them — not when everyone was hyped.
What Needs to Happen for Alts to Run
A drop in Bitcoin dominance alone is not enough.
For a strong altcoin phase, you usually need:
Bitcoin to stay stable (not crash)
More liquidity entering the market
Momentum shifting on higher timeframes
A few altcoins showing strength before the rest follow
If these conditions align, moves can happen quickly.
Where the Real Opportunity Is
Accumulation feels boring.
When rotation becomes obvious, most of the easy gains are already gone.
The best opportunity is usually during the transition phase — when the shift is starting but not yet clear to everyone.
If Bitcoin dominance starts turning down in a meaningful way, the next 2–3 months could look very different from the last six months.
Focus on structure.
Focus on liquidity.
Don’t trade based on emotion.
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