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Recently, an interesting phenomenon has been observed: discussions about altcoin season on social media have dropped to their lowest point in two years. This market "indifference" seems quite bleak, but from a historical perspective, it could actually be a bullish signal.
Honestly, retail investors are really no longer interested in altcoins. Dogecoin has fallen about 75% from its high, Solana dropped over 60%, and Cardano lost more than 70%. Since October, funds have been flowing into Bitcoin and stablecoins, with no one chasing smaller market cap coins. The Fear and Greed Index has mostly hovered between "Fear" and "Extreme Fear" over the past two months, and no one is even searching for keywords like "best cryptocurrencies to buy."
But there's a pattern worth noting. Over the past two years, each peak in altcoin season discussions has coincided with a local top in Dogecoin, followed by a rebound. When everyone is talking about altcoin season, it often signals a market top. Conversely, when no one mentions it anymore, large investors usually start quietly accumulating. The current market "indifference" precisely indicates that retail investors have completely given up.
On-chain data also speaks quietly. Wallets holding large amounts of Bitcoin approached historical highs in late February, indicating that institutions and big players are accumulating on dips. However, for altcoins to truly rebound, Bitcoin needs to stabilize first. The tensions from the Iran conflict are still pressuring global financial markets, and risk assets may remain under short-term pressure.
As for Ripple, it recently dropped from $1.36 to $1.33 on high trading volume—this is genuine selling pressure, not liquidity issues. The $1.35 level has now become a resistance point, repeatedly blocking rebounds along with the $1.40 to $1.41 range. Sellers still dominate, and if the $1.33 support breaks, the downside risk will significantly increase.
Overall, the conditions for altcoin season are not fully in place yet, but market sentiment is already prepared. This widespread "indifference" often precedes major moves, representing a period of silence before a big trend.