The altcoin market excluding Bitcoin and Ethereum shed 23% of its value in the first half of 2026, dropping to $666 billion as capital rotated out of riskier tokens into the two largest cryptocurrencies and stablecoins, according to market data compiled as of July 9.
"The market is rewarding tokens with real cash flows and punishing everything else," Jason Wu, an on-chain analyst focused on DeFi protocols, said. "The projects that survive this cycle will be the ones that can point to revenue, not just a community."
The decline accelerated through the second quarter. Bitcoin and Ethereum now account for roughly 66% of the total crypto market, up from about 60% at the start of the year, CoinGecko data shows. Ethereum confirmed a weekly death cross for the first time in years as its 50-week exponential moving average crossed below its 200-week EMA, yet ETH still outperformed most altcoins — trading at $1,746 as of 09:07 UTC, down 34% year over year. Bitcoin held at $61,749 after briefly touching 21-month lows below $58,000 last week.
The rotation is visible in exchange listing data. Centralized exchanges listed 64 blockchain infrastructure tokens and 46 DeFi tokens in the second quarter, while meme coin listings fell 79% from their peak in Q4 2024 to just 41 in Q2 2026, according to CryptoRank's analysis of more than 10,000 listings across 10 major exchanges. GameFi listings dropped 84% from their Q2 2024 peak to 15. Tokenized real-world assets — stocks, commodities, and Treasuries — became the most-listed category by share in the first half, with nearly one in five new listings representing a tokenized traditional asset.
The structural shift has several causes. Bitcoin spot ETFs absorbed billions in institutional flows before a 10-day, $2.7 billion outflow streak that ended July 2, pulling coins into regulated custody rather than exchange wallets. Bitcoin's exchange supply fell to its lowest since 2017 at 6.6% of circulating supply, and Ethereum's hit its lowest since 2015 at 4.3%, Santiment data shows. But those withdrawals are not all going to long-term cold storage — a growing share sits in DeFi protocols, institutional vaults, and ETF custodians, where it remains economically active.
The stablecoin market, often a proxy for crypto liquidity, contracted sharply. Total stablecoin market cap fell to $312 billion in June, its largest monthly drop since the TerraUSD collapse in 2022, according to DefiLlama data. That suggests capital is leaving the crypto ecosystem entirely, not just rotating between sectors.
The Fear & Greed Index registered 23 — "extreme fear" — as of July 9, a level that has historically coincided with bear market bottoms. But the index has stayed below 30 for weeks without triggering a reversal, and prediction market traders on Myriad are pricing a 72% chance that Ethereum hits $1,500 before it reaches $3,000 again.
For altcoins, the path forward depends on whether the capital that left exchanges and stablecoins returns to risk-on positions or stays parked in Bitcoin, Ethereum, and tokenized Treasuries. The next major test comes in the third quarter, when several large token unlocks are scheduled across DeFi and infrastructure protocols — events that historically add selling pressure to already thin order books.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.