Sui has become the latest layer-1 network to post a headline-grabbing stablecoin activity figure after a protocol-level fee change removed a common source of friction for users. According to the June 16 evening source packet, the network processed roughly $65 billion in stablecoin transfers in the five-day period following June 10, after Mysten Labs enabled gasless transfer operations for supported stablecoins in May.
The supported assets listed in the handoff include USDC, USDsui, suiUSDe, USDY, FDUSD, AUSD, and USDB. The simple idea behind the update is that stablecoin transfers should not require a user to first hold the network’s native token just to pay gas. For wallets, payments, and low-margin settlement use cases, that matters. A user or application can move a stablecoin directly without first solving the separate “where do I get gas?” problem.
The pitch is easy to understand. Stablecoins are most useful when they behave like money, and money becomes less useful when every transfer requires a separate fee asset. By removing that fee requirement for selected stablecoin transfers, Sui is trying to make the network feel closer to a payments rail than a trading-only chain.
That is why the $65 billion figure is worth watching even if it should not be treated as a pure adoption number. High transfer volume can show capacity and demand for cheap movement, but it can also be inflated by automated strategies. Zero-fee transfers are especially attractive to arbitrage bots, market makers, and high-frequency programs that can move assets many times without the normal cost filter.
The risk is that the market reads the volume as evidence of a sudden retail wave. That would be too generous. The better interpretation is that Sui has created conditions where stablecoin movement can scale quickly, and now the question is whether that activity converts into deeper liquidity, more applications, and durable user demand.
For SUI traders, the setup is still useful. Stablecoin velocity can become a narrative driver when markets are looking for layer-1 ecosystems with real transaction activity. But the useful test from here is not just the next five-day volume number. It is whether balances, application usage, and settlement demand remain elevated once the first burst of gasless activity is behind the network.
The next useful signal will be whether the activity shows up in more than raw transfer count. Traders should watch stablecoin balances, application-level demand, bridge flows, and whether Sui-based DeFi protocols see deeper liquidity. If the network keeps the transfer numbers high while balances and app usage also rise, the gasless update becomes a stronger adoption story. If the volume fades or remains concentrated in repeated transfers between the same actors, the market may treat it as a technical throughput headline rather than a durable growth signal.
This article was written by the News Desk and edited by Samuel Rae.


