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    Home»Ethereum»Stablecoins are moving more money while crypto’s cash pile gets smaller
    Ethereum

    Stablecoins are moving more money while crypto’s cash pile gets smaller

    币安计划官方By 币安计划官方July 13, 2026No Comments6 Mins Read
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    Stablecoins are moving more money while crypto’s cash pile gets smaller
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    Stablecoins are moving more money while crypto’s cash pile gets smaller

    Adjusted stablecoin transaction volume reached a record $1.79 trillion in June, according to Visa Onchain Analytics, up 63% from May’s $1.10 trillion and 125% higher than a year earlier. Across the same four weeks, the total pool of stablecoins in circulation shrank by $7.7 billion, the largest monthly dollar decline since the TerraUSD collapse in May 2022.

    The market has been treating that record volume as confirmation that money is pouring into crypto, but a closer look at the data tells us that it’s a much, much more complicated market than that. While usage reached an all-time high, the cash base underlying it contracted, meaning the same dollars are turning over faster in a shrinking pool.

    This isn’t good news for the market. Even though Circle and Visa see the numbers as a payments milestone, traders should see them as a liquidity warning.

    Supply and volume answer two completely different questions

    Stablecoin supply is the total value of issued tokens. It works as crypto’s cash balance: the dollar-denominated capital parked on exchanges, held in wallets, and locked into DeFi contracts, available to be spent on something else. DefiLlama currently places that figure near $312 billion.

    Volume is the amount transferred over a period. Visa’s adjusted measure, developed with Allium, Artemis, and Castle Island Ventures, filters out high-frequency bots, exchange treasury rebalancing, and repetitive smart-contract calls, so the $1.79 trillion is designed to be an estimate of economically meaningful on-chain activity. Adjusted volume in the first half of 2026 totaled $8.82 trillion, already exceeding the $5.8 trillion recorded in all of 2024.

    The two can move in opposite directions, and in the second quarter, they did. CEX.IO’s Q2 report put total supply at roughly $312 billion, down more than $3 billion from Q1’s record $315 billion and the first quarterly contraction since Q3 2023. Across Q2 as a whole, however, adjusted volume declined 5.5% alongside the supply contraction.

    Yield-bearing stablecoins drove most of that decline, falling 15% and shedding more than $3.5 billion, with Ethena’s sUSDe losing 52% of its market cap and Sky’s sUSDS down 16%.

    Treasury-backed products went the other way, as BlackRock’s BUIDL added 2%, Circle‘s USYC gained nearly 16%, and Ondo’s USDY grew by more than 66%.

    June’s $1.79 trillion in adjusted volume amounts to roughly 5.7 times the entire outstanding stablecoin base. That comparison mixes a monthly flow with a quarter-end stock, so treat it as a rough illustration of intensity rather than an absolute liquidity ratio.

    USDC handled about $1.21 trillion of June’s adjusted total, or 67%, while Tether’s USDT accounted for roughly $576 billion, or 32%. USDT remains far larger, with about $184 billion in circulating supply, compared to USDC’s $73 billion, so the smaller float is doing the majority of the moving.

    Transaction counts, meanwhile, fell by 530 million in Q2 to 4.48 billion, the steepest quarterly drop CEX.IO has on record. The data tell us that there have been fewer transactions, with greater value, drawn from a smaller pool.

    Supply is also fragmented across networks. Ethereum‘s L2s lost 24% of their stablecoin base in Q2, roughly $4.34 billion, with Arbitrum alone shedding 45% as liquidity migrated toward Hyperliquid. HyperEVM’s own stablecoin supply climbed 300% to $5.6 billion over the same period, and Tron added $3.4 billion. Ethereum’s base layer took the largest absolute hit, giving up more than $10 billion.

    Falling stablecoin supply can leave Bitcoin more exposed to weak demand

    Stablecoins are the most accessible source of deployable dollars in crypto. Traders hold them to buy spot, shift collateral between platforms, settle derivatives, and park gains during volatility without leaving the crypto ecosystem entirely.

    A contracting base can reduce immediately available on-chain dollar liquidity, especially when ETF flows and corporate buying also weaken. That can leave the market more sensitive to large orders, although the supply decline alone does not establish the cause of any Bitcoin move.

    We’ve seen this pattern play out with Bitcoin in the second quarter. BTC fell 14% across Q2 and traded below $60,000, its weakest level since 2024, while stablecoin supply posted its rare contraction.

    Institutional data provider Talos identified three simultaneous drags on demand and liquidity: a decline in stablecoin supply, spot Bitcoin ETF outflows, and slower corporate treasury buying. US spot Bitcoin ETFs have shed more than $4 billion in June, their worst monthly outflow since launch. Bitcoin has since recovered to around $63,000, well below the $93,000 it opened the year at.

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    Stablecoin supply falls for plenty of reasons with little bearing on crypto sentiment, including issuers redeeming tokens for bank dollars, DeFi users unwinding yield positions, and capital rotating into tokenized Treasury products.

    What the contraction does reliably indicate is that fewer digital dollars are available to buy risk assets at a moment when other major sources of demand are also pulling back.

    Payment companies see the increased volume as a win because their business depends on velocity and not on float. Visa’s own stablecoin settlement pilot reached a $7 billion annualized run rate in April across nine networks. Stripe’s treasury product now extends USDC-denominated balances to businesses in 101 countries, connecting them to ACH, wire, and SEPA.

    CryptoSlate covered that in late June, when search interest and headline supply were already cooling while the payment and treasury layer kept expanding. Nuvei’s $2.75 billion acquisition of Payoneer points the same way, folding token settlement into regulated commerce infrastructure.

    An increasingly positive regulatory outlook on stablecoins and crypto companies has already begun to accelerate this kind of institutional adoption. Circle received final OCC approval on July 10 to establish First National Digital Currency Bank, a federally chartered national trust bank operating as Circle National Trust, with USDC reserve management flagged as a future capability. The approval landed with GENIUS Act implementing rules still due from federal agencies this month.

    A shrinking float has done nothing to slow the institutional interest, and the BIS has already documented how stablecoin reserve flows now register in Treasury bill yields.

    Now that the dollars are flowing, the market is fighting over where they’ll settle. Coinbase’s Base processed about $565 billion in adjusted June volume, narrowly ahead of Ethereum’s $562 billion, with Tron third at roughly $320 billion. Wallets, fee structures, and app integrations are deciding where tokenized dollars come to rest, and issuers now have to compete on distribution as much as on trust.

    Two trends are unfolding at the same time. Stablecoin payment infrastructure is expanding, with record monthly adjusted volume, Circle’s federal trust-bank approval, and more processors treating dollar tokens as a standard capability.

    As a crypto liquidity reserve, however, the pool of deployable capital is shrinking while trading demand weakens alongside it.



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