Market sentiment within the crypto markets is generally considered a group emotional portrait: fear when prices go down, hope when markets go up. However, this portrait is rarely as well-rounded as it seems. This is particularly true when looking beneath the surface at how structural elements impact the measurement and interpretation of emotions evident within these measures. The most significant structural influence is that of Bitcoin dominance.
Given the significant portion of overall crypto market value, trading volume, and media coverage, the price action of Bitcoin overshadows the sentiment calculation. In turn, this implies that the sentiment of the overall crypto market might not necessarily paint the correct picture of the overall crypto market. Conversely, the sentiment might be reflective of Bitcoin’s performance, contrary to the information depicted by other parts of the crypto environment.
Understanding Bitcoin Dominance of Market Structure
The Bitcoin dominance represents the percentage of the total cryptocurrency market capitalization that Bitcoin possesses. Although the Bitcoin dominance looks very simple, it has broad implications.
Bitcoin holds a special place in the crypto market with
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It is the first cryptocurrency and remains the most widely recognized
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It has the deepest liquidity and trading volume
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It attracts institutional investors before other digital assets
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It is often regarded as a benchmark or “base layer” of the crypto economy
A rise in Bitcoin dominance means that investment is in Bitcoin and not in altcoins. When dominance falls, it is a sign of overall risk-taking on the markets. Since sentiment metrics are aggregations of data on the overall markets, any change in dominance has a significant impact on the data affecting emotional influences.
How Crypto Market Sentiment Metrics Are Created
Crypto sentiment metrics intend to measure investor psychology in numbers. This is achieved by compiling several investor behavior patterns into simplified outputs in the form of market emotions.
Common inputs may include:
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Price trends and momentum
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Short-term and long-term volatility
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Trading volume and liquidity changes
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Social media mentions and engagement levels
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Search engine usage
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Derivatives Market Positioning
Although these points are intended to encompass all of cryptocurrency markets as a whole, it is a common occurrence in which Bitcoin is at the forefront in all aspects. This is due to it having larger trading volumes and media presence compared to all other assets in total. As such, natural inclinations in tools such as sentiment are often more in favor of its interpretation.
A case in point would be the crypto fear and greed index, which takes a variety of data and reduces it to a single number. While very useful for gauging the extremes of market emotion, this index tends to correlate very well with the price of Bitcoin, particularly when Bitcoin’s dominance is high, which makes it less reliable for nuance.
Mechanisms That Bitcoin Dominance Induces Bias on Sentiment
Bitcoin dominance has several effects on sentiment measures.
1. Disproportionate Weight of Bitcoin Price Movements
Simply due to its size, Bitcoin price has more influence. An abrupt Bitcoin price surge may push the sentiment indicators into the ‘greed’ region even if:
At the same time, Bitcoin’s correction will also cause fear-based market readings irrespective of the stability or performance of other markets that are not related to Bitcoin. This will give the perception that the whole market is under some form of emotional strain when it is not the case.
2. Suppression of Altcoin-led Market Signal
There are times in the market when capital flows from Bitcoin to altcoins. It happens in the following situations:
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Bitcoin may see quiet or sideways trading
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Altcoins could experience strong momentum and volume escalation
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Sectors have narratives that determine activities
However, sentiment measures do not always capture this level of optimism because Bitcoin is still the main variable. This leads to inconsistent data, where sentiment levels are low due to fewer altcoin market participations being taken into consideration.
3. Volatility Amplification through Bitcoin
Bitcoin doesn’t always go to zero even when the market goes into decline: Sometimes the strongest assets to continue to grow are the ones that people least believe will do well or
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Quickly change volatility measures
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Spike emotional signals in sentiment algorithms
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Create abrupt transitions from fear to greed or vice versa
Since volatility is one of the elements of sentiment analysis, Bitcoin’s volatility tends to have a magnifying effect on readings of emotions despite the relatively low market volatility.
4. Media and Narrative Bias toward Bitcoin
Market sentiment is influenced by prices as well as stories. Bitcoin is the dominant one:
This narrative concentration is linked to social sentiment metrics that are commonly included in the calculation of indicators of sentiment. Consequently, the emotional responses to news about Bitcoin influence market sentiment measurements in addition to the dominance bias that is created as a result of that emotional influence.