
SEC Retreats From Ripple But Gensler’s Right About Crypto
Yesterday, the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) dropped two more charges against Ripple for selling its XRP crypto the wrong way. The score stands at Ripple 3, SEC 0. Ripple isn’t the first crypto business to defeat the regulators. SEC Chairman Gary Gensler seems to lose, like, half of the crypto cases that go to trial. That’s an abysmal record for a US government agency, but I can’t object to Gary’s interpretation of US securities law. Legally speaking, he’s right. Under US law, s...

Two Truths and a Lie About Altcoins
You’re hearing a lot about altcoins from bitmojis, analysts, and commentators. None of them are experts, but they’ve picked up some insights along the way. Since the market’s going up, they seem legit. Read on for two truths you might not realize and one lie you might believe.Truth #1—altcoins are $200 billion worth of crapAltcoins are a $400 billion asset class. At least $200 billion worth of that market cap consists of altcoins that suck, do nothing, and will bleed value forever. Some of th...

Like a Cockroach, Bitcoin Will Survive a Nuclear War
Since its creation, people have searched for a “use case” for Bitcoin. It seems the world has no use for money that you can send to anybody, anywhere, anytime, in any amount, without restriction, without revealing your sensitive personal information, without putting your property in another person’s control, with certainty that your transaction will go through and confirmation that every payment you receive is authentic and valid. Nor do they care about having a way to conduct finance that wo...
<100 subscribers

As promised in my last post, “Time to Buy Altcoins?” here’s the first in a series of articles about altcoins.
By now, you’ve probably heard about the “bitcoin dominance” chart.
That chart shows bitcoin’s percentage of the total cryptocurrency market capitalization. It looks like this:

Most analysts use this to trade bitcoins against altcoins or identify trends that make it advantageous to buy or sell altcoins. When the line goes down, altcoins dominate. When the line goes up, bitcoin dominates.
Sounds good but it won’t help you navigate the altcoin market.
Why not?
Because it includes stablecoins and Ethereum. Collectively, those assets have a total market cap almost as large as bitcoin’s and larger than all other remaining altcoins combined.
In other words, the bitcoin dominance chart tells you more about bitcoin’s relationship to ETH, USDT, USDC, and BUSD than bitcoin’s relationship to altcoins. You hardly see the other 30,000 altcoins reflected in this chart.
If you keep using this chart, you will miss key shifts in momentum. Are you sure you want to base your decisions on a chart that contains only a portion of the information you care about?
Try this one instead.

This chart strips out USDC, USDT, and ETH to better reflect the actual dynamics of altcoins vs. bitcoin.
(I would filter out BUSD, too, if I could figure out how to do this. BUSD skews the data a bit, but not enough to substantively change what it’s saying.)
When the line goes down, altcoins are losing to bitcoin. When the line goes up, altcoins are winning against bitcoin.
Usually, I only show this chart with paid subscribers of my newsletter, Crypto is Easy. I made an exception for this article because it’s too important to ignore, just note that the specific version I present to subscribers has some extra features.
While the bitcoin dominance chart shows bitcoin pacing the wider market since May 2021, my chart tells a completely different story.
From May 2021 to May 2022, bitcoin crushed altcoins in an accelerating, parabolic, downward black arc—a long, powerful trend marked in black in the image above.
Even as bitcoin’s price made all-time highs, altcoins lagged behind. Once bitcoin’s price started to fall, altcoins fell harder.
What happened at the end of May?
Altcoins broke the parabola. They shifted the trend. I mentioned this in my weekly rundown for May 29, 2022.
Since then, altcoin dominance has mostly kept pace with bitcoin within a range of four percentage points.
Why have altcoins paced bitcoin since May? Aren’t they supposed to bleed against bitcoin for the next two years? Isn’t that why my friends don’t want to let me buy altcoins?
I don’t know. My best guesses?
Altcoins have already suffered so much. You can see that in my chart. Most are already dead and probably not coming back.
Of the ones that are still alive, they don’t have much more room to fall. Some offer staking rewards and other incentives for holding tokens, contributing to the community, and participating in the network.
I published some of them in my altcoin reports, including a new one in November.
Meanwhile, bitcoin has to deal with selling from miners, bankrupt lenders, recipients of the Mt. Gox settlement, and potentially worse depending on the fallout from FTX’s collapse and problems at Digital Currency Group.
Does it matter? Crypto faces lots of headwinds in the short term. This chart looks only at relationships, not causes or expectations.
To be fair, I used the traditional bitcoin dominance chart for a long time. Too long!
As a result, I missed key shifts in patterns during 2021 and early 2022. Once I switched to my chart, the picture became very clear:
Bitcoin demolished altcoins in a parabolic move from May 2021 to May 2022.
In June 2022, momentum shifted to altcoins after breaking the 75% level, a historical inflection point.
Altcoins already crashed against bitcoin. We don’t need to wait for this to happen (it already happened).
What other relationships will this chart reveal?
I’ll keep you posted in my Crypto is Easy newsletter.
Mark Helfman publishes the Crypto is Easy newsletter. He is also the author of three books and a top bitcoin writer on Medium and Hacker Noon. Learn more about him in his bio.

As promised in my last post, “Time to Buy Altcoins?” here’s the first in a series of articles about altcoins.
By now, you’ve probably heard about the “bitcoin dominance” chart.
That chart shows bitcoin’s percentage of the total cryptocurrency market capitalization. It looks like this:

Most analysts use this to trade bitcoins against altcoins or identify trends that make it advantageous to buy or sell altcoins. When the line goes down, altcoins dominate. When the line goes up, bitcoin dominates.
Sounds good but it won’t help you navigate the altcoin market.
Why not?
Because it includes stablecoins and Ethereum. Collectively, those assets have a total market cap almost as large as bitcoin’s and larger than all other remaining altcoins combined.
In other words, the bitcoin dominance chart tells you more about bitcoin’s relationship to ETH, USDT, USDC, and BUSD than bitcoin’s relationship to altcoins. You hardly see the other 30,000 altcoins reflected in this chart.
If you keep using this chart, you will miss key shifts in momentum. Are you sure you want to base your decisions on a chart that contains only a portion of the information you care about?
Try this one instead.

This chart strips out USDC, USDT, and ETH to better reflect the actual dynamics of altcoins vs. bitcoin.
(I would filter out BUSD, too, if I could figure out how to do this. BUSD skews the data a bit, but not enough to substantively change what it’s saying.)
When the line goes down, altcoins are losing to bitcoin. When the line goes up, altcoins are winning against bitcoin.
Usually, I only show this chart with paid subscribers of my newsletter, Crypto is Easy. I made an exception for this article because it’s too important to ignore, just note that the specific version I present to subscribers has some extra features.
While the bitcoin dominance chart shows bitcoin pacing the wider market since May 2021, my chart tells a completely different story.
From May 2021 to May 2022, bitcoin crushed altcoins in an accelerating, parabolic, downward black arc—a long, powerful trend marked in black in the image above.
Even as bitcoin’s price made all-time highs, altcoins lagged behind. Once bitcoin’s price started to fall, altcoins fell harder.
What happened at the end of May?
Altcoins broke the parabola. They shifted the trend. I mentioned this in my weekly rundown for May 29, 2022.
Since then, altcoin dominance has mostly kept pace with bitcoin within a range of four percentage points.
Why have altcoins paced bitcoin since May? Aren’t they supposed to bleed against bitcoin for the next two years? Isn’t that why my friends don’t want to let me buy altcoins?
I don’t know. My best guesses?
Altcoins have already suffered so much. You can see that in my chart. Most are already dead and probably not coming back.
Of the ones that are still alive, they don’t have much more room to fall. Some offer staking rewards and other incentives for holding tokens, contributing to the community, and participating in the network.
I published some of them in my altcoin reports, including a new one in November.
Meanwhile, bitcoin has to deal with selling from miners, bankrupt lenders, recipients of the Mt. Gox settlement, and potentially worse depending on the fallout from FTX’s collapse and problems at Digital Currency Group.
Does it matter? Crypto faces lots of headwinds in the short term. This chart looks only at relationships, not causes or expectations.
To be fair, I used the traditional bitcoin dominance chart for a long time. Too long!
As a result, I missed key shifts in patterns during 2021 and early 2022. Once I switched to my chart, the picture became very clear:
Bitcoin demolished altcoins in a parabolic move from May 2021 to May 2022.
In June 2022, momentum shifted to altcoins after breaking the 75% level, a historical inflection point.
Altcoins already crashed against bitcoin. We don’t need to wait for this to happen (it already happened).
What other relationships will this chart reveal?
I’ll keep you posted in my Crypto is Easy newsletter.
Mark Helfman publishes the Crypto is Easy newsletter. He is also the author of three books and a top bitcoin writer on Medium and Hacker Noon. Learn more about him in his bio.

SEC Retreats From Ripple But Gensler’s Right About Crypto
Yesterday, the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) dropped two more charges against Ripple for selling its XRP crypto the wrong way. The score stands at Ripple 3, SEC 0. Ripple isn’t the first crypto business to defeat the regulators. SEC Chairman Gary Gensler seems to lose, like, half of the crypto cases that go to trial. That’s an abysmal record for a US government agency, but I can’t object to Gary’s interpretation of US securities law. Legally speaking, he’s right. Under US law, s...

Two Truths and a Lie About Altcoins
You’re hearing a lot about altcoins from bitmojis, analysts, and commentators. None of them are experts, but they’ve picked up some insights along the way. Since the market’s going up, they seem legit. Read on for two truths you might not realize and one lie you might believe.Truth #1—altcoins are $200 billion worth of crapAltcoins are a $400 billion asset class. At least $200 billion worth of that market cap consists of altcoins that suck, do nothing, and will bleed value forever. Some of th...

Like a Cockroach, Bitcoin Will Survive a Nuclear War
Since its creation, people have searched for a “use case” for Bitcoin. It seems the world has no use for money that you can send to anybody, anywhere, anytime, in any amount, without restriction, without revealing your sensitive personal information, without putting your property in another person’s control, with certainty that your transaction will go through and confirmation that every payment you receive is authentic and valid. Nor do they care about having a way to conduct finance that wo...
Share Dialog
Share Dialog
No comments yet