Bitcoin's Share of Total Crypto Market Slips Back Toward 50%

Publicado en by Coindesk | Publicado en

Mencionado en este artículo
Bitcoin's dominance rate, or its share of the total cryptocurrency market, is on the verge of falling below 50 percent for the first time in over seven months.

At press time, the world's largest cryptocurrency accounts for 50.9 percent of the total capitalization of the entire market and fell as low as 50.54 on March 17, according to data from CoinMarketCap.

Bitcoin's dominance rate was perpetually in excess of 70 percent, but it began to deflate as new cryptocurrencies were created and sold to investors in initial coin offerings, causing bitcoin's dominance rate to drop to a low of 32.48 percent on Jan. 13, 2018.

Since, Aug. 11 of last year bitcoin's share of the cryptocurrency market has not fallen below 50 percent.

Having traded between $3,200 and $4,300 since Dec. 2018, bitcoin's recent drop in market dominance can be attributed to a strong performance from the broader altcoin market, comprised of all cryptocurrencies excluding bitcoin, rather than any significant depreciation to its own market.

As a result, the market capitalization of all cryptocurrencies excluding bitcoin has grown 33 percent since hitting a 2019 low of $51 billion on Feb. 6 to its current value of roughly $69 billion.

In the same time span, bitcoin's market capitalization has also seen notable growth, but to a lesser extent than the altcoin market.

Since Feb. 6, bitcoin's market cap has increased from $59 billion to its current value of $71 billion - a jump of 20 percent.

Bitcoin's shrinking dominance could be seen as a sign the crypto markets are shifting to a "Risk-on" environment where investors prefer riskier assets, as altcoins are perceived to be.

As it stands, the total capitalization of the broader cryptocurrency market records $140.6 billion, down 83 percent from its all-time high of $835 billion set on Jan. 7, 2018.

x