USDT Dominance Surges 13% as Bitcoin Crashes Below $60,000 – Golden Cross Signals Deeper Correction Ahead
A massive shift is underway in crypto markets: USDT dominance has skyrocketed 13% as Bitcoin tumbles below the critical $60,000 support level. This explosive move, marked by a rare ‘golden cross’ on the stablecoin’s dominance chart, is flashing a stark warning that risk appetite is evaporating. With the top cryptocurrency now facing a potential 10% correction, investors are fleeing to stablecoins at the fastest rate in months, signaling a painful pullback may be just the beginning for Bitcoin and the broader altcoin market.
What rising USDT dominance means
USDT dominance measures the token’s portion of the total crypto market value. When this ratio rises, it signals that investors are shifting away from more volatile assets and opting for vehicles pegged to the US dollar. Historically, this trend has often been a hallmark of risk-off sentiment in the market.
Issued by Tether, USDT ranks third in crypto market capitalization with $186.84 billion, trailing only Bitcoin and Ether. The token is designed to maintain parity with one US dollar, and it is widely utilized as a dollar equivalent throughout the crypto ecosystem. Investors regularly turn to USDT for both trading and as a funding asset in decentralized finance transactions.
The increase in USDT dominance indicates that market participants are moving toward dollar-pegged assets rather than riskier tokens, presenting a negative outlook for Bitcoin.
This pattern was especially notable last week: USDT dominance surged by 13.5 percent in a single day to reach 9 percent—its sharpest daily rise since March 2025. During the same interval, the price of Bitcoin dropped around 14 percent, briefly dipping below the $60,000 mark.
Glossary: A golden cross occurs when a shorter-term moving average rises above a longer-term moving average. In this scenario, the 50-week average crosses above the 200-week average, signaling momentum strength.
Technical signals point to weakened risk appetite
The golden cross in question occurs when the 50-week moving average overtakes the 200-week moving average. This setup signals that USDT’s rise in market share might not be over, implying a deepening risk-averse trend and continued capital migration toward USDT.
Still, capital moving into stablecoins does not always indicate that funds are ready to reenter the crypto market. Investors may have already converted their assets into traditional fiat and exited crypto entirely. Last week’s data supports this interpretation: as USDT dominance spiked, the stablecoin’s market cap actually declined for the third straight week.
The simultaneous rise in USDT dominance and fall in market capitalization suggests that a substantial portion of funds did not remain parked in the stablecoin but instead exited the crypto market altogether.
Additional pressure points on Bitcoin
This technical trend coincides with one of Bitcoin’s weakest weekly performances in recent months. Ongoing outflows from US-based spot Bitcoin ETFs and intensifying competition from artificial intelligence stocks for institutional capital are also cited as contributing to increased market pressure.
Taken together, the data indicates that risk appetite across the cryptocurrency sector has not merely paused but weakened considerably. Unless there is a clear reversal in USDT dominance and renewed capital rotation into riskier assets, the downward pressure on Bitcoin and the broader market is likely to persist.
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