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Interesting things are happening in the crypto markets as we enter the Year of the Horse, and it all relates to how Ethereum behaves relative to Bitcoin. The horse's fall — which in market folklore signifies abrupt price changes and sudden momentum — seems to be playing out exactly as we saw before the last major bull run.
Let's look at concrete numbers. Bitcoin is currently trading around $71.81K, Ethereum at $2.22K. But the interesting part is the ratio between the two. The ETH-BTC ratio has already dropped about 31% since it hit a low, about nine months before gold reached its recent peak. We've seen this pattern before, and what followed was not exactly subtle: Ethereum rose more than 300% against Bitcoin as capital shifted from safe investments into crypto.
The reason this moment is special lies in the repetition of the same structure. In the previous cycle, ETH reached its low against Bitcoin roughly nine months before gold's peak, after which it dropped another 30-40%. Many traders thought the trade was over then. But that horse's fall turned out to be the turning point. As gold cooled and defensive positions were unwound, capital flowed back into higher-risk crypto. The result? That 300%+ increase of Ethereum against Bitcoin.
Today, it looks remarkably similar. The structure feels familiar, not identical, but in the same neighborhood. The ETH-to-BTC chart hit its low nine months before gold's recent peak and has now dropped about 31% — exactly the range that previously preceded a powerful reversal.
What makes this moment different? Sentiment indicators add nuance. Traders are still buying protection against further declines, but not with the same panic as last year. QCP Capital notes that this indicates caution rather than a total sell-off. At the same time, central banks and institutional investors signal that their demand for safe havens remains intact, suggesting we're not in a free fall.
The horse metaphor fits well here. Markets are no longer limping but haven't yet galloped. That horse's fall — that sharp decline — seems to be the lowest point. If liquidity stabilizes and Bitcoin dominance decreases, capital rotation could accelerate quickly. Horses don't gallop gently.
Gold is now trading around $4,830 after volatility caused by margin-driven sell-offs, but the support from central banks remains a guiding factor. Asian markets responded positively to optimism about trade agreements: the Nikkei 225 rose 2.4%, South Korea's Kospi jumped over 5%.
Predictive markets give mixed signals. On Kalshi, bettors say Bitcoin will reach 105K in 2026, while on Polymarket, only 29% of traders believe it will hit $126,000. So this horse might be running out of the race, but not to record highs.
For those following this on Gate: this moment deserves attention. The historical parallels are impressive, and the horse's fall we're seeing now could very well be the starting point of something bigger.