Binance logs three straight months of heavy stablecoin outflows, erasing $9B in reserves and signaling a sustained liquidity squeeze across crypto markets.
Summary
- Binance has seen negative stablecoin netflows for three consecutive months, the longest stretch since the 2023 downturn.
- Net outflows climbed from about $1.8B in December to nearly $2.9B in January and around $3B halfway through February.
- Stablecoin reserves dropped from roughly $50.9B in November to $41.8B, shrinking the exchange’s capacity to absorb volatility.
Binance has recorded three consecutive months of negative stablecoin netflows, marking a sustained contraction in crypto market liquidity, according to data shared by CryptoQuant.
The outflows represent the longest comparable stretch since the 2023 bear market, the data showed.
Monthly figures indicate an acceleration in the trend. December saw approximately $1.8 billion in net stablecoin outflows, followed by nearly $2.9 billion in January, according to the data. February outflows have reached close to $3 billion despite the month being only halfway complete.
Binance’s stablecoin reserves have declined from approximately $50.9 billion in November to $41.8 billion, representing a contraction of nearly $9 billion, the data indicated.
Stablecoin outflows from major exchanges typically indicate capital leaving the exchange ecosystem rather than being redeployed into other crypto assets, according to market analysts. Stablecoins serve as readily deployable capital in cryptocurrency markets, and declining balances reduce the capacity to absorb price volatility.
The outflows occur amid elevated global uncertainty and geopolitical tensions, factors that market observers say may be influencing investor behavior toward more defensive positioning.
The trend has continued without signs of stabilization, according to the latest available data from CryptoQuant.