Bitcoin’s latest market cycle is showing signs of a major structural shift. New data shared by CryptoQuant founder Ki Young Ju suggests that the long-standing pattern of capital rotating from Bitcoin into smaller cryptocurrencies has weakened significantly since 2021.
The trend raises questions about whether traditional altcoin seasons can still emerge in the same way they did during previous bull markets.

According to data highlighted by Ki Young Ju on X, trading activity between Bitcoin and altcoins has fallen sharply over the past several years. The figures exclude major assets such as Ethereum, XRP, BNB, and Solana, focusing instead on the broader altcoin market.
During the 2017-2018 and 2021 bull cycles, traders frequently moved profits from Bitcoin into smaller cryptocurrencies. This rotation helped fuel widespread rallies across the altcoin sector and created the market phenomenon commonly known as “altseason.”
Current market conditions tell a different story. BTC-denominated altcoin trading volumes have remained near multi-year lows despite Bitcoin maintaining strong market performance. The decline suggests that investors are no longer rotating capital into smaller tokens at the same pace seen in earlier cycles.
Ju stated that the Bitcoin-to-altcoin asset rotation that once drove altcoin rallies has “basically disappeared.” He added that BTC-pair altcoin volume has collapsed since 2021, indicating a significant change in market behavior.
The data suggests that Bitcoin’s price movements are no longer generating the same broad-based gains across the altcoin market.
The weakening of Bitcoin-altcoin rotation points to a more concentrated market environment. Capital appears increasingly focused on Bitcoin and a small group of large-cap digital assets rather than spreading across hundreds of alternative cryptocurrencies.
Market observers note that stablecoin trading pairs have become more dominant in recent years. This shift has reduced the direct influence of Bitcoin on many altcoin price movements. Instead, individual tokens are increasingly reacting to project developments, ecosystem growth, liquidity conditions, and adoption metrics.
Additional indicators referenced alongside the volume data show limited changes in buy-side activity and broader altcoin volume trends between 2018 and 2026. These readings support the view that growth in Bitcoin-altcoin trading relationships has slowed considerably.
The trend may reflect a maturing crypto market where investors are becoming more selective. Rather than buying altcoins simply because Bitcoin is rising, market participants appear to be paying closer attention to project-specific fundamentals.
If the current pattern continues, future altcoin rallies could become more asset-specific instead of being driven by broad capital rotation from Bitcoin. That would mark a notable departure from the market dynamics that defined previous crypto bull cycles.
The post Bitcoin-to-Altcoin Rotation Has Collapsed Since 2021, Data Shows appeared first on Live Bitcoin News.

