Stablecoin reserves on Binance have climbed back toward levels last seen on February 8, as USDT transfers through the Tron network into centralized exchanges accelerate while Bitcoin trades near $69,000.
The CryptoQuant data tracked by analyst Amr Taha covers USDT transfers via TRC-20 across eight major centralized exchanges from mid-November 2025 through March 9, 2026. Binance dominates the picture entirely. The orange Binance line dwarfs every other exchange on the chart, running between $1.5 billion and $4.9 billion across the period while competitors like Bybit, OKX, and the remaining exchanges cluster near the zero line by comparison.
The current reading of $4.77 billion represents the second significant peak since February 8, when Binance reserves briefly touched approximately $4.9 billion. Between those two peaks, reserves pulled back before climbing again through late February and into March. The pattern describes two separate waves of stablecoin accumulation on the platform, not a single continuous buildup.
The timing of the February 8 spike is notable. That date corresponds almost exactly to the period CryptoQuant’s net PnL data identified as peak capitulation, when Bitcoin broke below $60,000 and weekly realized losses hit negative $2 billion. Stablecoins piled onto Binance as Bitcoin was hitting its lowest levels. What followed was a recovery toward $70,000.
USDT sitting on an exchange is uninvested capital. It has already cleared the friction of converting fiat to crypto. The holder has made a decision to be in the ecosystem but has not yet deployed into a position. That makes exchange stablecoin reserves a measure of latent buying power rather than actual demand.
When reserves are low, available dry powder is thin. New buyers need to convert fiat first, which takes time and creates natural friction. When reserves are high, conversion has already happened and capital can move into assets within seconds. The speed at which stablecoin reserves can deploy into Bitcoin or other assets is orders of magnitude faster than fiat-to-crypto conversion pipelines.
$4.77 billion on Binance alone represents meaningful potential buying pressure that has not yet moved. Whether it moves into assets or back out to fiat depends entirely on what price does next and whether holders interpret the current level as an opportunity or a trap.
The chart specifically tracks USDT transfers via TRC-20, the Tron network’s token standard. That detail connects to multiple data points covered this week. Tron leads all blockchains in daily active users at 3.2 million according to Presto Research. Revolut’s volume breakdown showed Tron handling 23% of all crypto transactions on its platform. Blockchain.com’s Ghana launch identified TRX as one of the top three traded assets alongside USDT and Bitcoin.
The majority of that Tron activity is USDT movement rather than TRX speculation. The network functions as the dominant stablecoin transfer rail for global retail crypto users precisely because it is cheap and fast. Tracking TRC-20 USDT flows into exchanges therefore captures a broad signal about global retail liquidity positioning rather than a single geographic or demographic cohort.
Stablecoin accumulation precedes both rallies and continued sideways action. The February 8 buildup preceded a recovery. It also followed a capitulation that took Bitcoin from $100,000 to $60,000 over several months. High reserves are a necessary condition for a rally. They are not a sufficient one. Capital sitting on Binance needs a catalyst to deploy. The catalyst is price momentum, narrative, or both.
At $4.77 billion and climbing, the dry powder is there. The match has not been lit yet.
The post Binance Is Sitting on Almost $4B in USDT – the Second Major Accumulation Since the February Low appeared first on ETHNews.


