CoinGecko’s Q1 2026 report says the crypto market fell 20.4% to $2.4 trillion as BTC dropped, stablecoins held steady, CEX volumes sank and oil trading surged.CoinGecko’s Q1 2026 report says the crypto market fell 20.4% to $2.4 trillion as BTC dropped, stablecoins held steady, CEX volumes sank and oil trading surged.

Crypto Market Lost $622 Billion in Q1 2026, CoinGecko Says in New Report

For feedback or concerns regarding this content, please contact us at [email protected]
coingecko

CoinGecko has published its 2026 Q1 Crypto Industry Report with valuable data and insights. The latest quarterly industry review paints a stark picture of the crypto market’s first three months of 2026: a sector that moved from correction into what the research firm described as a sustained “crypto winter,” with bearish momentum from late 2025 colliding with a volatile global backdrop.

According to the report, total crypto market capitalization fell 20.4%, or about $622 billion, during the quarter, ending March at $2.4 trillion. That left the market roughly 45% below its October 2025 peak. CoinGecko said the sharpest part of the decline came in mid-January to early February, around the time Kevin Warsh was nominated as the next Federal Reserve Chair, a development the report says may have signaled a more hawkish U.S. monetary policy stance.

The report suggests that the quarter was not just another down period for digital assets, but a broader reset in market behavior. While crypto prices weakened, the market was also shaped by a clear move toward safety, with investors rotating into assets and products that looked more resilient in a high-stress environment.

CoinGecko said the total market remained mostly rangebound after the early-quarter drop, even as the US-Iran war added to geopolitical instability. Average daily trading volume across the crypto market also fell sharply, dropping to $117.8 billion, down 27.2% quarter over quarter.

Rising Oil Trades and Stablecoin Resilience

One of the more notable findings in the report was the strange stability of stablecoins during a quarter when almost everything else was under pressure. CoinGecko said stablecoin market capitalization rose only slightly, by $1.6 billion, or 0.5%, ending Q1 at $309.9 billion. That may sound like a minor move, but in a weak market, it stood out as evidence that stablecoins continued to act as the sector’s liquidity anchor.

Tether’s USDT, still the largest stablecoin by far, saw a 1.6% drop in supply, equivalent to about $3.0 billion, marking its first meaningful decline since 2022 Q2. USDT ended the quarter at $184.1 billion, with a 59% share of the market. By contrast, Circle’s USDC gained 2.4% to reach $77.1 billion.

CoinGecko also highlighted strong growth in Sky’s USDS and WLFI’s USD1, both of which posted double-digit gains during the quarter. USDS rose 30.8% after the launch of Sky Agents, while USD1 climbed 32.5% following a Binance WLFI airdrop campaign. Ethena’s USDe continued to contract, though at a much slower pace than before, falling 6.6% to $5.9 billion after the aggressive deleveraging seen late last year.

The report’s market breakdown also showed that traditional macro assets were moving more violently than Bitcoin in some cases, reinforcing how unusual the quarter was. Crude oil emerged as the strongest major asset in CoinGecko’s comparison, surging 76.9% in Q1 and reversing its 2025 decline. The report attributed the jump to supply shocks caused by the US-Iran conflict.

Gold also remained firm, rising 8.1%, although CoinGecko noted that its momentum cooled slightly from the record-breaking run it had enjoyed in 2025. By comparison, Bitcoin fell 22.0% during the quarter, continuing to underperform despite the turbulence that hit U.S. equities as well. The NASDAQ and S&P 500 declined 7.1% and 4.8%, respectively, recording their worst quarterly returns since 2022. The U.S. Dollar Index edged up 1.4% as investors fled toward safety.

That backdrop mattered because it showed crypto was not falling in isolation. Instead, CoinGecko’s data suggests digital assets were being pulled lower in a quarter when investors were already nervous across markets. The combination of a hawkish policy scare, geopolitical conflict and broad risk-off behavior created conditions in which even crypto’s most established names struggled to find support.

For Bitcoin, in particular, the quarter was a reminder that it is still often treated as a risk asset when markets become stressed, even though proponents frequently describe it as a hedge. CoinGecko’s report did not frame that dynamic as a permanent verdict on Bitcoin’s role, but the numbers show that in Q1 2026, the flagship cryptocurrency lagged behind almost every major safe-haven or defensive trade highlighted in the report.

Crypto Market Enters Sustained Winter

Trading activity on centralized exchanges also reflected the slowdown. CoinGecko said the top 10 spot centralized exchanges handled $2.7 trillion in volume during Q1, a steep decline of 39.1% from the $4.5 trillion recorded in Q4 2025. Activity stayed above $1 trillion in January but faded as the quarter progressed, with March slipping to just $0.8 trillion, the weakest monthly reading since November 2023.

Binance held onto its leadership position with a 37.0% market share, while MEXC was the only other exchange to post a double-digit share at 10.0%. Every one of the top 10 spot centralized exchanges saw volume fall during the quarter, with losses ranging from 23% to 55%. HTX recorded the sharpest drop, falling to $133.6 billion from $294.4 billion in the previous quarter, which pushed its market share down to 4.9% and left it ranked 10th.

On the decentralized side, the report found that chain-level trading dominance continued to shift even as total volumes softened. Solana remained the leading chain for spot trading in Q1, finishing with 30.6% dominance despite a 26.5% drop in volume. But CoinGecko also pointed out that Ethereum managed to overtake Solana in March, when Ethereum held a 27% share to Solana’s 26%.

For the quarter as a whole, BSC still narrowly edged out Ethereum, with 24.5% dominance versus Ethereum’s 23.7%, keeping BSC in second place. CoinGecko suggested, however, that BSC could fall to third in Q2 if its volume continues to decline more sharply than Ethereum’s. The report also singled out Monad as a fast-rising player. Having launched its mainnet at the start of the bear market in November 2025, Monad has gradually climbed the rankings and is now the 10th most active chain for spot trading, ahead of Unichain and Optimism.

Perhaps the most eye-catching section of the report was CoinGecko’s discussion of Hyperliquid and the rapid rise of commodity perpetuals. Since the launch of HIP-3 commodities perps on December 12, 2025, CoinGecko said these contracts have grown dramatically and now account for about 30% of Hyperliquid’s overall open interest.

HIP-3 allows independent builders who stake at least 500,000 HYPE to launch their own perpetual contracts, and the system has already enabled trading in tokenized stocks and commodities. According to CoinGecko, commodities performed especially well during the gold and silver rush in early 2026.

But the real breakout came from oil. With tensions rising in the Middle East and uncertainty spreading through markets, demand for 24/7 oil trading surged, pushing both open interest and trading volume to new highs week after week. By the end of Q1, open interest reached $2.1 billion, and by April 6, it had broken another record at $2.3 billion.

Just three days later, on April 9, the combined daily volume of tradeXYZ’s oil perp products, WTIOIL and BRENTOIL, crossed $4.0 billion and, for the first time, surpassed Bitcoin’s daily trading volume on Hyperliquid. CoinGecko said tradeXYZ, the largest HIP-3 deployer, now accounts for around 25.5% of all open interest on the platform.

Taken together, the report presents Q1 2026 as a quarter in which crypto did not simply drift lower, but reordered itself around safety, macro shocks and new forms of speculative demand. Stablecoins held their ground. Exchanges saw volumes dry up. Solana retained leadership in decentralized spot trading, though Ethereum gained ground.

And the most dramatic growth story of the quarter may have come not from Bitcoin or Ethereum, but from commodity derivatives, especially oil-linked products, which benefited from a world where geopolitical stress fed around-the-clock trading demand. CoinGecko’s conclusion is hard to miss: the quarter was weak for the broader crypto market, but lively beneath the surface, with capital and attention moving quickly toward the parts of the industry that best matched the mood of the moment.

Market Opportunity
4 Logo
4 Price(4)
$0.011518
$0.011518$0.011518
+5.56%
USD
4 (4) Live Price Chart
Disclaimer: The articles reposted on this site are sourced from public platforms and are provided for informational purposes only. They do not necessarily reflect the views of MEXC. All rights remain with the original authors. If you believe any content infringes on third-party rights, please contact [email protected] for removal. MEXC makes no guarantees regarding the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the content and is not responsible for any actions taken based on the information provided. The content does not constitute financial, legal, or other professional advice, nor should it be considered a recommendation or endorsement by MEXC.

USD1 Genesis: 0 Fees + 12% APR

USD1 Genesis: 0 Fees + 12% APRUSD1 Genesis: 0 Fees + 12% APR

New users: stake for up to 600% APR. Limited time!