Stablecoins remained the strongest segment of the crypto market in the first quarter as broader conditions weakened. CEX.IO data showed supply expanded while trading activity shifted heavily toward these assets. The move reflected defensive positioning as investors reduced exposure to volatile tokens.
The same dataset indicated that stablecoins continued to absorb liquidity during market contraction. Traders rotated capital into dollar-pegged assets to preserve value while maintaining market access. That shift occurred because price volatility reduced confidence in directional trades.
CEX.IO data showed stablecoins accounted for 75% of total crypto trading volume during the quarter. The figure marked the highest share on record and exceeded previous peaks seen during earlier downturns. That concentration reflected a preference for liquidity and stability over speculative positioning.
Stablecoins’ share of total digital asset trading volume data. Source: CEX.io
The data also showed total stablecoin supply rose by roughly $8 billion, reaching a record $315 billion. Growth slowed compared to late 2023, yet remained positive despite declining market capitalization across digital assets. This pattern suggested that capital stayed within crypto but shifted toward lower-risk instruments.
Transaction data reinforced this trend. Stablecoin transfers surpassed $28 trillion during the quarter, extending a multi-year rise in usage. The move followed increasing reliance on stablecoins as settlement infrastructure across exchanges and decentralized platforms.
CEX.IO records showed a sharp divergence between retail and automated activity during the same period. Retail-sized transfers declined by 16%, marking the steepest drop on record. The fall pointed to reduced participation from individual traders during uncertain market conditions.
At the same time, automated systems dominated transaction flows. Bots accounted for approximately 76% of total stablecoin volume, reflecting increased algorithmic activity. This shift occurred because market participants relied more on arbitrage and liquidity strategies.
Algorithmic trading typically expands during low-volatility phases, when price inefficiencies remain narrow but consistent. The dominance of automated flows suggested that institutional or systematic strategies drove a larger share of activity. That structure often emerges when organic demand weakens.
CEX.IO data also showed divergence among major stablecoin issuers during the quarter. Circle’s USD Coin supply increased by roughly $2 billion, while Tether’s USDt declined by about $3 billion. The split marked the first clear divergence since mid-2022 during a bear cycle.
Source: CEX.io
Earlier transaction data aligned with this trend. Reports in February showed rising USD Coin transfer activity across trading and on-chain usage. The increase suggested stronger adoption for financial operations rather than simple value storage.
At the same time, newer segments drove part of the supply expansion. Yield-bearing stablecoins gained traction as investors searched for passive returns. CoinGecko data placed the segment’s market value near $3.7 billion, with daily trading volumes exceeding $100 million.
Regulatory discussions in the United States shaped this segment’s outlook. Policymakers debated how to classify stablecoins offering interest-like returns, while traditional banks raised concerns. That tension could influence how yield-bearing models develop in the coming quarters.
Stablecoins remain central to crypto market liquidity as trading behavior shifts toward automation. The next phase will depend on whether retail activity stabilizes or continues declining. Market focus now turns to regulatory developments and near-term demand for yield-bearing products.
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