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A popular signal that confirms sustained bullish shifts in market momentum just appeared on the dominance chart for Tether’s USDT, the world’s largest stablecoin by market capitalization.
That may not be good news for bitcoin , the largest cryptocurrency.
USDT’s dominance rate, which measures its share of the total crypto market cap, is sporting a golden crossover, a technical signal that indicates the dollar-pegged token’s allocation may increase in the weeks ahead.
That’s a negative signal for bitcoin because it implies crypto market participants are shifting their funds into a token whose value doesn’t fluctuate against the dollar, rather than piling into riskier investments.
To understand why, it helps first to grasp USDT’s role in crypto markets.
At $186.84 billion, the Tether-issued token trails only bitcoin and ether (ETH) in market cap. It is designed to trade 1:1 against the U.S. dollar and is widely seen as a dollar-equivalent asset, a sort-of tokenized version of the greenback.
Funding currency of choice
It has become the preferred funding currency of choice, investors use it to purchase coins and for DeFi lending and borrowing strategies.
Its dominance rate tends to rise when the price of bitcoin falls, reflecting capital rotation out of more speculative investments into dollar equivalents, a classic risk-off move, much like in traditional finance.
Last week offered a clear glimpse of that dynamic. USDT’s dominance rate surged 13.5% to 9%, the biggest single-day jump since March 2025, as the bitcoin price fell almost 14%, briefly dipping below $60,000.
The golden cross, in which the 50-week moving average overtakes the 200-week average, suggests this rotation may not be over because it’s a sign that momentum in USDT’s share of market cap is becoming more bullish.
In other words, risk aversion across the broader crypto market could deepen, driving continued capital flows into USDT.
It is worth noting that the capital sitting in the stablecoin may not simply be waiting for the right moment to re-enter the market. Investors may convert their holdings to fiat and leave the crypto market altogether.
That appears to be what happened last week. While USDT’s dominance rose sharply, its market cap fell for a third consecutive week. That combination suggests a meaningful portion of the capital did not stay there. More likely, it left the crypto market entirely.
The golden cross arrives alongside bitcoin’s worst weekly performance in months, persistent outflows from spot U.S. exchange-traded funds (ETFs) and growing competition from AI stocks for institutional capital.
That confluence of events paints a consistent picture. The appetite for crypto risk is genuinely cooling, not just pausing.
Until USDT’s dominance starts reversing, signaling capital rotating back into risk assets, the path of least resistance for bitcoin and the broader market may remain to the downside.
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