Bitwise Asset Management’s chief investment officer Matt Hougan says the altcoin seasons traders have come to expect are a thing of the past. He made the comments in an interview on Wednesday, and his view lines up with fresh data showing retail interest in altcoins has collapsed.
Bitcoin itself has had a rough stretch. It fell as low as $60,000 in February before recovering. At the time of Hougan’s interview, it was trading around $70,237.
The numbers back up the gloomy mood. Dogecoin is down roughly 75% from its cycle peak. Solana has dropped over 60%. Cardano has lost more than 70%.
These are not small pullbacks. They represent months of sustained selling pressure, with capital moving out of altcoins and into Bitcoin and stablecoins.
The Crypto Fear and Greed Index spent most of February and March swinging between “fear” and “extreme fear.” The Coinbase Premium Index was negative for over 40 consecutive days in February, meaning U.S. retail buyers were largely absent even from Bitcoin.
Google Trends data for searches like “best crypto to buy” have flatlined. Searches for “bitcoin to zero” hit a U.S. record earlier this month.
Crypto sentiment firm Santiment tracked weekly mentions of “altseason” across social media and found they have dropped to their lowest level in at least two years.
That kind of silence has historically come before price recoveries. When everyone was talking about altseason, it marked a top. When nobody was, accumulation quietly followed.
Bitcoin wallets holding 100 or more BTC approached 20,000 for the first time in late February, a sign that larger holders were buying the dip even as retail stepped away.
Not everyone agrees altseason is dead. BitMEX co-founder Arthur Hayes said in December that altcoin seasons are always happening somewhere. Analyst Matthew Hyland argued in November that the Bitcoin dominance chart was signaling weakness, which could favor altcoins.
For now, most analysts agree that any broad altcoin recovery depends on Bitcoin finding stable footing first. Ongoing pressure from global financial markets, including uncertainty tied to the Iran conflict, has kept risk appetite low.
Santiment’s data as of March 6 shows the altseason chatter remains near its lowest point in two years.
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