Bitcoin’s dominance in the cryptocurrency market has experienced a significant decline from its midyear peaks, indicating a shift in investor focus toward Ethereum and other large-cap tokens. As of mid-2026, Bitcoin’s market share had reached its highest at 66% in July, but it has since decreased, reflecting heightened interest in altcoins.
Ethereum has been gaining relative strength against Bitcoin, supported by increasing network usage and transaction growth. Currently, Ethereum has experienced a bull run with returns of around 160% since the beginning of 2023, although this trails Bitcoin’s remarkable 457% increase during the same period, as indicated by CoinGecko data. This disparity in performance underscores Ethereum’s historically weaker market presence despite improving market conditions.
Several key factors are suggesting potential changes in the market landscape. A noticeable market rotation is underway, characterized by Bitcoin’s declining dominance, which many analysts interpret as a shift in capital towards altcoins, particularly Ethereum. The ETH/BTC ratio, which tracks Ethereum’s performance relative to Bitcoin, has appreciated by 3.59% year-to-date. Analysts note that a rising ETH/BTC ratio combined with Bitcoin’s stagnation has historically been associated with the onset of an “altcoin season”. According to Jimmy Xue, co-founder and COO of Axis, this trend is driven by investors seeking greater exposure to the Ethereum ecosystem, particularly following the stabilization of Bitcoin ETF markets.
Despite this evolving dynamic, there remains some skepticism in prediction markets regarding the immediate onset of a broad altcoin rally. Data from Myriad indicates that users assign only a 19% probability to an alt season occurring before April 2026.
Strengthening fundamentals also underlie this capital rotation. Ethereum’s total transaction count has reached 2.05 million, reflecting a 6.8% increase since the beginning of 2026 and a 31% spike since mid-December, signaling growing adoption of the platform.
While experts are optimistic about Ethereum’s short-term performance, they highlight different driving forces. Shivam Thakral, CEO of BuyUCoin, points to several catalysts, including increasing demand from exchange-traded funds, advancements in Layer 2 adoption, fee burn dynamics, and renewed activity in DeFi. On the other hand, Xue emphasizes potential benefits from upcoming protocol upgrades, such as Fusaka and the Glamsterdam fork, which may position Ethereum as a primary settlement layer in the evolving “Agentic AI” economy.
Currently, Ethereum’s year-to-date return of 11% has outstripped Bitcoin’s return of 8.5%. However, Thakral cautions that these trends may be cyclical and not indicative of a lasting regime shift without ongoing support from improved macroeconomic conditions and liquidity.

