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I've noticed an interesting asymmetry in the market these days. Bitcoin has only increased by 0.85% over four days, while some small-cap altcoins have skyrocketed several times — others approaching tenfold growth. At first glance, the logic seems simple: altcoins have a high beta coefficient, so they grow faster. But this only explains why they grow more, not why the difference is measured in tens of times.
The problem is deeper. The altcoin season index is currently at 34 out of 100, and Bitcoin's dominance remains at 58.5%. By historical standards, this is not even a warm-up. But in this environment, some tokens move as if the altcoin season is already in full swing. Why?
The answer lies in the market structure. From December 2024 to April 2026, the total market capitalization of altcoins (excluding BTC and ETH) fell from $1.16 trillion to about $700 billion — a 40% decline. This is not just a number. When capitalization halves, the entry threshold for controlling the price drops tenfold with the same amount of money. That’s where the real game begins.
Let me give a specific example. SIREN rapidly grew at the end of March, but then it turned out that one entity controls up to 88% of the circulating supply. Even by conservative estimates — 48 wallets hold 66.5% of the circulation. With such a distribution, the price ceases to be the result of market consensus. It becomes whatever the majority owner decides. After analysts published this, SIREN dropped from $2.56 to $0.79 in a day — a 70% decline. Small investors, thinking they were participating in a free market, found themselves trapped, with an exit strategy already planned.
This is not an exception. For heavily fallen altcoins, this is the norm. The deeper the fall, the less capital is needed to control the price. A sharp decline is not a discount but vulnerability, and this is now widespread across the market.
But there’s another layer to this game — financial leverage. During SIREN’s growth, the rate reached -0.2989% every 8 hours, which annualizes to about -328%. Shorts pay longs 0.3% of capital every 8 hours. Over a month, this eats up more than 25% of the position, not counting losses from price increases. In extreme markets, rates drop to -0.4579% per 8 hours, which annualizes to -501%. In such a scenario, the short seller isn’t risking much; they are slowly being eroded by the machine.
Then a chain reaction kicks in. Price rises → short losses increase → when the margin call line is reached, the system automatically closes positions at market price → this further pushes up the price → new shorts are triggered → a new wave of buying. In a market with thin liquidity, each trade causes a more significant movement. This is not growth from consensus but a structured one-sided wear.
Meanwhile, trading volume on DEXes on BSC increased by 97% year-over-year in a week. Is it really hot? Yes. But this is an accelerated turnover of existing money, not an influx of new funds. Institutional movements confirm this: in early April, net inflow into Solana ETF dropped to zero, XRP ETF shows outflows, Ethereum ETF sometimes gains $120 million, sometimes loses $71 million. The picture is one of anticipation, not a switch.
This is fundamentally different from the true altcoin season of 2021. Back then, Bitcoin’s dominance fell from 70% below 40%, and the altcoin season index exceeded 90. It was an all-encompassing rise driven by macro liquidity, mass retail investor FOMO, and a continuous influx of new money.
Today, institutional funds via ETFs follow asset allocation logic, not crypto market emotions. They make “adjustments to BTC positions to X%,” not “the altcoin season is about to start.” These funds will not automatically flow into altcoins without a clear signal. This is the main structural difference between 2021 and 2026.
Returning to the initial data: a 0.85% increase in BTC is a macro signal, a pause before the next move. The explosive growth of certain altcoins is an echo, a result of ultra-low capitalizations after a 40% drop creating vulnerability, small amounts of money in low liquidity conditions shifting prices, and extremely negative financial rates turning shorts into fuel for longs.
Two phenomena are happening simultaneously but tell different stories. For a full altcoin season, Bitcoin’s dominance needs to fall to 39%, institutional funds need to shift from a Bitcoin-focused setup to a diversified portfolio, and new money must continuously flow in rather than out. None of these points will be resolved by a 10% increase.
In this machine, there are two types of participants: one knows who it works for, the other is fuel. By distinguishing signal from echo, one can make a choice that is not predetermined by the system.