A decade ago, the cryptocurrency market moved in near-perfect lockstep with bitcoin. When BTC surged, hundreds of altcoins followed. When it crashed, so did everything else. Fast forward to 2026, and despite the explosion of thousands of new tokens and narratives around diversification, the crypto market still largely behaves the same way.
Bitcoin remains the dominant force, and year-to-date performance makes that painfully clear. BTC has fallen roughly 14%, sliding to around $75,000, its lowest level since April last year. Most major and minor cryptocurrencies have mirrored that decline, with losses often matching or exceeding bitcoin’s drop. Even portfolios spread across multiple tokens with different “use cases” have failed to provide meaningful diversification.
Data from CoinDesk’s 16 crypto indices reinforces this point. Indexes tracking DeFi, smart contract platforms, and computing-related tokens are down between 15% and 25% this year. This broad-based decline highlights how tightly correlated the market remains, despite claims that crypto now resembles a mature, multi-sector asset class similar to equities.
More concerning is that revenue-generating blockchain projects have not been spared. According to DefiLlama, decentralized exchanges and lending protocols such as Aave, Jupiter, Aerodrome, and Hyperliquid, along with layer-1 networks like Tron, are among the top fee earners. Yet their native tokens are mostly in the red. Aave’s AAVE token is down around 26%, while Hyperliquid’s HYPE is a rare outlier, still up about 20% year-to-date thanks to strong demand for tokenized commodities.
Market observers argue this stems from a dominant narrative labeling bitcoin, ether, and solana as “safe haven” assets, while DeFi and revenue-producing tokens are treated as riskier. At the same time, the rise of stablecoins has made it easier for investors to exit risk entirely, acting as crypto’s version of cash during downturns.
With spot bitcoin ETFs reinforcing BTC’s dominance above 50% of total market value, analysts see little chance of meaningful decoupling. For now, crypto remains a market where bitcoin sets the direction, and nearly everything else follows.
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